Reflection Seismology in Azimuthally Anisotropic Media
Leon Thomsen
Many recent papers have suggested that crustal rocks may be azimuthally
anisotropic to some degree. Such anisotropy
is usually attributed to joints,
fractures, or microcracks aligned by a horizontal minimum stress to lie
vertically and with a preferred azimuth. In this talk, I present a heuristic
discussion of the effects of such
anisotropy
on seismic reflection data (both in
traveltime anomalies and in reflection amplitude anomalies). New mathematical
results, based on a model of transverse isotropy with symmetry axis horizontal,
verify the heuristic discussion. In addition, mathematical results for moveout
velocity, as compared with vertical velocity, show the moveout to be abnormal
and, in part, counterintuitive.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91038©1987 AAPG Annual Convention, Los Angeles, California, June 7-10, 1987.