Influence of Salt Geometry and Salt-Sediment Interaction
on Seismic
Imaging
Bui, Huyen 1; Jamieson, George 1; Snyder,
Fred 1; Herbert, Sharlene 1; Becker, David 1;
Smith, Martiris 1
(1)WesternGeco, Shlumberger, Houston, TX.
The dynamic mechanism of salt system and salt tectonics is mainly
driven by the weight of overburden and subsalt
strata. Regional extension also
plays an important role in rising salt diapirs or in their subsidence. When the
salt moves, it rolls-over and carries the sediments along with it. We have
observed many inclusions inside the salt with different patterns on many
seismic sections in the
Gulf
of
Mexico
. These inclusions cause changes of
velocity inside the salt body. These lithology changes inside the salt have
also been observed in many outcrops onshore US and also in many wells
penetrating through the salt in the
Gulf
of
Mexico
. Therefore, the constant
velocity that has been traditionally used in the salt for seismic depth
imaging
is no longer valid.
Salt and sediments have intimate interaction with each other. In
the other words, the sedimentation can drive the salt flows. The formation and
deformation history of the salt plays very important roles in the spatial
distribution of the lithological facies, and in the generation, and migration
of hydrocarbons. Understanding the salt shape and salt-sediment interaction are
not just required for structural geology. It will help with the determining the
correct velocity of the salt for a better anisotropic velocity model in seismic
imaging
. We will describe a project where we have incorporated the geological
knowledge to re-interpret the salt shape and to update the base of the salt by
non-seismic methods (EM and gravity). Then, we have re-migrated the seismic data
with the new salt shape in an area in the Green Canyon, in the
Gulf
of
Mexico
with very good results. Hence, incorporation of geological understanding and
geophysical methods for more accurate salt shape interpretation will
significantly help to improve the
subsalt
images for “true earth model”.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90135©2011 AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Milan, Italy, 23-26 October 2011.