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Bob Hardage1
Search and Discovery Article #40502 (2010)
Posted January 19, 2010
*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the author, in AAPG Explorer, December, 2009,
and entitled “Horizontal Wave
Testing Helps”. Editor of Geophysical Corner is Bob A. Hardage ([email protected]). Managing Editor of AAPG Explorer is Vern Stefanic; Larry Nation is Communications Director. Please refer to closely related article by Bob Hardage, 2010, Vertical
Wave
Testing, Search and Discovery article #40503.
1 Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas at Austin ([email protected])
Collecting optimal quality seismic data across some onshore prospects can be a challenge for numerous reasons:
- Near-surface conditions may produce strong refraction noise.
- Ambient noise may exist because of local culture.
- Different energy sources, such as shot hole explosives, vibrators and impulsive impactors, need to be considered.
- Several receiver-patch dimensions should be evaluated for effectiveness.
Because of these factors, a source that produces good-quality data across a sandy-soil grassland may produce poor data across an area of hard rock outcrops, and a receiver dimension that cancels ground-roll noise at prospect A may fail to do so at prospect B. Before a seismic data-acquisition effort is launched across a prospect, seismic test data need to be acquired to determine:
- The type of energy source.
- The dimension of the receiver patch.
- The specific source-receiver geometry that will yield data with appropriate signal bandwidth and signal-to-noise character.
The effort expended in acquiring this basic planning information is commonly referred to as wave
testing or noise testing.
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Horizontal
Seismic If a source station is inaccessible for any reason, that source point should be moved closer to the receiver spread to prevent gaps in the offset profile. Successive source stations should then be moved forward by the same distance to preserve a uniform spacing L between the remaining source-station positions.
Site selection is important when recording
Several reflection events can be seen between 1.5 and 2.5 s at large offset distances beyond the surface- A 12-Hz low-cut filter has been applied to these data to aid in reducing low-frequency noise. The frequency and wavelength content of the data inside the indicated Transform window is illustrated on Figure 4 and confirms that the data are dominated by high-velocity reflection signals. Running sums can be made using different numbers of test-data traces to simulate how receiver groups spanning any desired distance affect the frequency content and signal-to-noise ratio of prospect data. With this knowledge, seismic contractors can deploy receiver groups that have dimensions that will produce optimal quality data when production data recording is done. Similarly, different sources can be deployed at each source station SP1 to SPN (Figure 1) to compare data quality produced by vibrators versus impactors or by small explosive charges deployed at shallow depth versus large explosive charges placed at deep depths. By comparing data quality generated by each source option, a contractor will know the best source to use across a specific prospect.
The concept described here should really be called horizontal
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