Volume Based Curvature Calculations Show Effects of Stress Fields on Varying Lithologies
BLUMENTRITT, CHARLES, University of Houston, Houston, Texas
Structural geologists use curvature analysis to identify stress
fields acting in an area and the fracture orientations which result. Several articles in
the recent literature deal with such analysis on surfaces constructed from interpretation
of 3-D seismic data and the attendant problems caused by errors in picking and the effects
of scale dependence. We resolve some of these problems by computing various curvatures
directly from the uninterpreted seismic volume using a very small subvolume to minimize
the effects of small scale variations in data quality and a scale factor to adjust the
spatial frequency of the analysis. Once the curvatures are computed, they may be extracted
from the resultant volume along time slices or horizon slices, without the effects of the
picking process altering the basic calculation.
We apply these techniques to a data set from the Central Basin Platform
of West Texas and compare horizon slices through the Devonian Thirtyone Formation
Carbonate to slices through the Devonian Woodford Shale to find that the shale is less
intensely deformed. We selected these formations as being relatively uniform in their
respective lithologies and nearly contemporaneous and therefore affected by the same
stress fields. We further compare the results to Permian age carbonates that have not been
subjected to the stress fields of the Early to Middle Paleozoic to identify Late Paleozoic
stress fields and remove their effects from the deeper section.