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A Practical Approach to Seismic
Imaging
of Complex Geology*
By
Matthew Brzostowski1 and Todd Jones2
Search and Discovery Article #40057 (2002)
*Adapted for online presentation from the article by the authors in AAPG Explorer (April, 2000), entitled “Complexities Can Be Mind-Bending.” Appreciation is expressed to the authors and to M. Ray Thomasson, former Chairman of the AAPG Geophysical Integration Committee, and Larry Nation, AAPG Communications Director, for their support of this online version.
1Houston, Texas (713-469-1311)
2Houston, Texas
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General Statement
The biggest distinction between geology and geophysics can probably be
broken down into the different domains from which they both start their
work. The geologist works in terms of spatial coordinates and
The geophysicist, however, deals with information recorded in time. His
job in seismic processing is to transform this information in time into
Figure 1b. Complications of translating time into distance where the well is not vertical.
Analogies and Examples
The problem is not unlike the scenario depicted in
Figure 1a: Here we have a person
determining the This is the nature of seismic exploration: We record the strength of seismic reflections, and we can assume they all come from directly below the surface, but more likely the reflections come from anywhere in some three dimensional subsurface location around our surface position. Figure 2a shows more clearly the issue. Reflected energy from a subsurface point will travel to our surface receivers in a straight line if the velocity field is constant. It would be a simple and straightforward process to compute the location of the subsurface point if we knew this velocity field. However, the issue becomes more complicated when we acknowledge that seismic energy bends according to Snell’s law when the velocity changes in the subsurface as shown in Figure 2b. Obviously, there is a lot of velocity contrast in complex geologic regimes.
This ray bending is not unlike light bending as it travels through water
and air as depicted in Figure 3. The
resultant bent rays can lead to a gross misinterpretation of what is in
the glass if we do not account for it. That is the goal of seismic
Figure 4 shows this distortion due to
velocity contrasts quite clearly. In both cases we are looking for the
oil trap depicted by the black shape. In one case, on the left in
Figure 4, we need only deal with the
relatively minor velocity contrast between the water column and the
subsurface when Specification of Velocity field
One of the means we have for controlling the
processing of seismic data and the eventual placement of events comes
from the specification of a velocity field. We normally use the timing
of seismic reflections as a function of spatial position and offset to
determine this velocity field. However, we can make approximations to
the velocity field when it comes to
There are two broad classes of
Time migration velocity fields will not honor
lateral velocity changes, although they can pick up vertical changes, as
depicted in Figure 5 (right). Time
migration algorithms do this for the sake of faster computation speed
and less image sensitivity to the velocity model.
The
price for the accuracy, however, is more expense - and there is a
greater need to determine the velocity field accurately. |
