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By
Don W. Steeples1 and Gregory S. Baker
Search and Discovery Article #40047 (2002)
*Adapted for online presentation from
an article by the same author in AAPG Explorer (June, 1998), entitled
“Finding
Seismic
Static Corrections.” Appreciation is expressed to the author
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.
1University of Kansas ([email protected]).
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where Dtstatic is a first-order approximation assuming the angle from vertical of h is small (ratio of V1/V0 is large).
General Statement
Static corrections are made to
The velocity-variation component of the correction involves what is commonly called the "weathered zone." In some places the weathered zone consists mostly of unconsolidated, near-surface materials. It is not commonly realized that P-wave velocities in these shallow, unconsolidated materials can be substantially lower than the velocity of sound in air. The primary purpose of this article is to show that when low-velocity surface layers are present, a thickness of even a few feet can have profound static effects. Introduction
Most methods used to attack the
static-correction problem depend upon using the near-surface velocity
information obtainable from conventional The problem in its most elementary form, with a point source and a two-geophone receiver array, is depicted in Figure 1. Note that in this case the surface topography is flat, but there is a variation in the thickness of the low-velocity material (V0) that overlies a higher-velocity layer (V1). When the velocity of the near-surface material is substantially less than the velocity of a P-wave in air, only one or two feet of variation in thickness in the near-surface layers can cause significant static shifts. These problems can occur almost anywhere, but they are most common where a variable thickness of alluvial, fluvial, aeolian or glacial material overlies bedrock. The first-order static correction for the geologic situation depicted in Figure 1 is shown graphically in Figure 2: The amount of static correction necessary is highly dependent on the velocity of the unconsolidated material (V0) and is not strongly dependent on the velocity of the underlying higher-velocity layer (V1). Under conditions similar to those presented in Figure 1, knowing both the velocity and the thickness of the V0 material is especially important. Very-near-surface P-wave velocities are commonly 800 to 1,500 ft/s. In Figure 2, the static correction for these materials ranges from about 0.8 ms to 0.2 ms per foot of thickness, respectively. The real problem arises when velocities of less than 600 ft/s are encountered in near-surface materials, as these low velocities produce static corrections of more than 1 ms per foot of thickness. An error of only one foot in calculating the thickness of near-surface materials with a velocity of 500 ft/s, for example, results in a static-correction error of 1.5 ms.
Many seismologists believe that P-wave
velocity in earth materials is never less than about 1,100 ft/s (the
velocity of sound in air). The Wyllie-equation argument says that the
In reality, the Wyllie-equation argument has
very little to do with the P-wave velocity in unconsolidated materials
because velocity is dependent only upon the shear modulus, the bulk
modulus, and the density of the total material, not on the average of
these properties for the constituent materials. The other reason that
1,100 ft/s is often quoted as a minimum velocity is that most Ultra-shallow velocity measurements
Figure 3 shows four representative field
files from an ultra-shallow
To obtain this degree of detail, geophone
intervals of two inches were used. The To determine the velocities even closer to the surface, we have obtained P-wave velocity measurements with refraction surveys using an automotive spark plug as an energy source. We obtained a 100-foot-long spark-plug wire from an automotive supply company and hooked one end of the wire to the distributor of a vehicle and the other end to a spark plug placed in a hole 1/2-inch deep and 1/2-inch in diameter, located about one inch from the nearest geophone. Although it has very low power, the spark plug is a highly-repeatable, high-frequency source. Figure 4 shows a detailed ultra-shallow field file from a test site in Lawrence, Kansas, using the spark-plug source. The velocity of the near-surface material varies from about 450 ft/s to about 1,000 ft/s (Figure 5). Discussion
In the first section, we showed the potential
effects of very-low near-surface velocities on intra-array static
shifts. In the second section, we presented examples of We believe that having accurate information about the velocity and thickness of near-surface materials is essential to removing static shifts in conventional reflection surveys when source- and/or receiver arrays are used in a geologic region with very-low-velocity, near-surface materials. Return to top. |
