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Jeremy J. Zimmerman1
Search and Discovery Article #40023 (2001)
1Nuevo Energy Company, Houston, TX ([email protected]).
*Adapted for online presentation from article entitled “It’s All a Matter of Space and Time” by the same author in Geophysical Corner, AAPG Explorer, December, 1996. 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.
Most geoscientists in the petroleum industry are dealing with the problem that seismic information is usually displayed in some form of a time section, be it a time stack section or a time-migrated section. Drillers, engineers, geologists, geophysicists, and earth scientists in general describe the earth in depth, as in “x” number of feet to target, “x” number of feet of oil column, etc. How do you get easily from time to depth? The answer depends on the desired level of complexity, which is usually dictated by how soon something is needed or how much it will cost.
The overall process is called depth conversion, although some prefer to be more rigorous and call it depth migration. The simplest definition of depth conversion is the conversion of some measurable time quantity into some understandable value in depth. The old joke of when someone asks how deep is the well and the junior geoscientist responds that “it’s about three seconds ...” pops into many people’s minds when dealing with representations of well progress with respect to a chosen seismic section. So just how do we convert from time to depth?
The purpose of this article is to introduce geoscientists to some basic ideas about depth conversion as well as give examples of when it is appropriate to use a given method. It is not meant to be a rigorous dissertation of depth migration.
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Click here for sequence of Figures 3 and 7.
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Click here for sequence of Figures 4 and 5.
Click here for sequence of Figures 3 and 7. The
Most
seismic-modeling packages, whether they are two-dimensional (2-D) or
three-dimensional (3-D), simulate the expansion of the wavefront in the
subsurface by describing a A seismic source imparts energy into the ground, sending waves of energy down into the subsurface, where some of the energy is reflected, some of it is transmitted and some portion is lost as attenuation. That part which is reflected is measured or detected by geophones (land) or hydrophones (marine). A seismic section is a measure of the amount of energy that is reflected back to the location of the geophone/hydrophone with respect to the time it takes a wavefront, and therefore the assumed model of the wavefront – the ray, to travel along selected paths. Typically,
rays are easily influenced by the medium in which they travel. The
characteristic that is of greatest concern to the geoscientist is the
velocity of the different layers through which the rays travel. When
seismic energy encounters a medium of different velocity from the one in
which it is traveling, it is deflected in accordance with the velocity
change, as shown in Figure 2. If the new medium is higher velocity, the
energy – and therefore, the The first type of section (and most often ignored by much of the petroleum industry) is the time stack section. It is seen as confusing because it contains segments of events, events that exaggerate the size of structures and even events that cross each other (the ubiquitous “bow-tie” structure). The time stack image of the depth model (Figure 3) is shown in Figure 4. Note that the flat portion of the model remains flat, but the dipping events are much more complex. The second type of section (and the one most often used by the petroleum industry) is the time migrated section. It is seen as less confusing and more of a realistic depiction of the subsurface. To many geoscientists, this represents a realistic cross-section and therefore can be used to infer structural and tectonic features and stress regime. Many of the models regarding interaction between salt and sediment in the Gulf of Mexico are based on these time migrated sections. As shown in Figure 5, this image is still distorted in comparison to the actual model that produced it. Upon seeing a time-migrated section, one is apt to describe geologic processes that have produced such a structure. However, the problem remains that the section is shown with respect to time. When dealing with flat or slightly dipping events (less than 10o), a simple depth conversion using the straight vertical ray assumption can be used. This is done by taking the vertical time difference between events on a time-migrated seismic section and multiplying it by the interval velocity. This result must be divided in two to account for the two-way travel path (down to the reflector and back up to the shallower reflector). The interval velocity value is often calibrated to available well information in the area. (A entirely different problem exists with respect to deriving interval velocities – a subject best left to another article.) If
dips on events exceed 10o and the velocity field is
“well-behaved,” then depth conversion becomes a little more
complicated. The idea that vertical travel times taken from even a
time-migrated section can be used to calculate a depth section using an
interval-velocity value (be it local, regional, constant, or varying) can
lead a geoscientist down the primrose path to a dry hole. What often
happens is an interval velocity map is created for selected horizons at
sample points taken from wells. This interval-velocity map is then
multiplied by the isochron map made on the time differences between the
two selected horizons, and a depth map that matches at the well is created
by this “depth-stretch” method. Of course, this depth map agrees with
the information at the wells; it was derived using that information. The
fallacy of this method is the assumption that the If
the subsurface reflectors exhibit no dip, then this is a valid assumption.
Otherwise, the endpoint at depth for the vertical Snell’s
law tells us that small changes in dip and velocity can cause the The example shown here is only in two dimensions. A method for creating depth models based on ray displacements in three dimensions is called map migration. The usual input into map migration is an interpreter’s time map created from a series of 2-D time-migrated seismic lines or one 3-D time-migrated dataset. The more appropriate method is to use an interpretation made of the time-stack data, but this is prohibitive in that interpretation of time-stack data in a complex structural domain is difficult. Many
map migration algorithms take the above into account when inverse
raytracing the data into the depth domain and calculating a Depth
migration is not a panacea. Limitations in algorithms, computer power, or
the failure of the |


