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GCThin-Bed Interpretation
Using Reference Surfaces*
Bob Hardage1
Search and Discovery Article #40535 (2010)
Posted May 31, 2010
*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the author, in AAPG Explorer, May, 2010, and entitled “Looking High and Low for References”. Editor of Geophysical Corner is Bob A. Hardage (mailto:[email protected]). Managing Editor of AAPG Explorer is Vern Stefanic; Larry Nation is Communications Director.
1Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas at Austin ([email protected])
The fundamental criteria required of a seismic
reflection event that is to be used as a reference surface for interpreting thin-bed geology are that the
seismic
reflection should:
1) Extend across the entire seismic
image space and have a good signal-to-noise character.
2) Be reasonably close (vertically) to the geology that is to be interpreted.
3) Be conformable to the strata that need to be analyzed.
Criterion 3 is probably the most important requirement on this list.
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Figure 1 shows a
Four horizon surfaces labeled A, B, C and D, each conformable to the reference surface, pass through the targeted channel system on Figure 1b. Each of these horizon surfaces can tentatively be assumed to be a reasonable approximation of a stratal surface that intersects the channel system because each horizon is conformable to the selected reference reflection event, and a fundamental thesis of
Figure 2a shows reflection amplitude behavior on horizon surface B. This horizon surface does a reasonable job of defining the targeted channel system (channel 1) across the lower right quadrant of the display and also depicts a second channel system (channel 2) at the top of the image display. The image on Figure 2a is a horizon-based image, meaning that the
In challenging
To illustrate the advantage of this opposite-direction convergence of
The reflection amplitude response on a horizon surface conformable to reference surface 2 and positioned 26 milliseconds below that reference surface is displayed on Figure 2b. This image is again a one-point-thick attribute display (i.e. a horizon-based attribute). The channel systems are a bit crisper in appearance and their geometries are more definitive on this second imaging attempt than they were on the first effort (Figure 2a).
This dual-direction approach to constructing horizon surfaces that traverse thin-bed targets is a concept that often will provide valuable results. An even better approach would be to calculate stratal slices through a bracketed
Unfortunately, not all
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