Using 9C shear wave data to delineate sand in Morrow channels

2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jasha Cultreri ◽  
Allen Gilmer ◽  
Bob Hardage
Keyword(s):  
2022 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-53
Author(s):  
Zhiwen Deng ◽  
Rui Zhang ◽  
Liang Gou ◽  
Shaohua Zhang ◽  
Yuanyuan Yue ◽  
...  

The formation containing shallow gas clouds poses a major challenge for conventional P-wave seismic surveys in the Sanhu area, Qaidam Basin, west China, as it dramatically attenuates seismic P-waves, resulting in high uncertainty in the subsurface structure and complexity in reservoir characterization. To address this issue, we proposed a workflow of direct shear-wave seismic (S-S) surveys. This is because the shear wave is not significantly affected by the pore fluid. Our workflow includes acquisition, processing, and interpretation in calibration with conventional P-wave seismic data to obtain improved subsurface structure images and reservoir characterization. To procure a good S-wave seismic image, several key techniques were applied: (1) a newly developed S-wave vibrator, one of the most powerful such vibrators in the world, was used to send a strong S-wave into the subsurface; (2) the acquired 9C S-S data sets initially were rotated into SH-SH and SV-SV components and subsequently were rotated into fast and slow S-wave components; and (3) a surface-wave inversion technique was applied to obtain the near-surface shear-wave velocity, used for static correction. As expected, the S-wave data were not affected by the gas clouds. This allowed us to map the subsurface structures with stronger confidence than with the P-wave data. Such S-wave data materialize into similar frequency spectra as P-wave data with a better signal-to-noise ratio. Seismic attributes were also applied to the S-wave data sets. This resulted in clearly visible geologic features that were invisible in the P-wave data.


First Break ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Gut ◽  
W. Söllner ◽  
E. Lüschen ◽  
H.A.K. Edelman
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 8
Author(s):  
Oluwatobi Oloye ◽  
Adekunle Adepelumi

<p>As part of the efforts to examine the elastic and engineering properties of the subsurface sequence at a proposed new power plant site in Edo State, a geophysical survey involving Multichannel Analysis of Surface Waves (MASW) was carried out. The MASW was adopted to determine the vertical and lateral variations in velocity beneath each seismic line. The MASW was carried out on two seismic lines each trending NE-SW. A geophone interval of 3 m was used, and the length of the seismic lines ranged from 60 – 90 m. The ES-3000 seismograph was used for the surface wave data acquisition and the Shear-Wave velocity structures of the area were obtained through the inversion of the acquired surface wave data. The one dimensional (1D) S-Wave velocity profiles along the lines were diagnostic of generally low velocity lithologies that suggest sand, clayey sand and sandy clay formations with relatively varying thicknesses. The subsurface layers delineated had shear-wave velocity values in the range of 63-400 m/s. They were classified using the NEHRP Seismic Site Classification, and all of them were in the range of stiff soil to soft clay soil. The bulk moduli (k) for these soils were in the range of 3.22-3.98 GPa. This depicts relatively low strength of the subsurface materials. The shear moduli (μ) values range from 7.15-7.43 MPa, which is indicative of low to moderate strength. The information provided in this study will aid the structural engineer or architect in foundation design of the proposed power plant. From the results of this study, it is concluded that although the subsurface layers are of relatively low strength, with the right intervention of the civil engineer, a suitable foundation can be designed for the gas plant.</p>


1996 ◽  
Author(s):  
John F. Arestad ◽  
Robert Windels ◽  
Thomas. L. Davis
Keyword(s):  

Geophysics ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 70 (5) ◽  
pp. D55-D64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ramzy M. Al-Zayer ◽  
Ilya Tsvankin

Reflection moveout of SV-waves in transversely isotropic media with a vertical symmetry axis (VTI media) can provide valuable information about the model parameters and help to overcome the ambiguities in the inversion of P-wave data. Here, to develop a foundation for shear-wave migration velocity analysis, we study SV-wave image gathers obtained after prestack depth migration. The key issue, addressed using both approximate analytic results and Kirchhoff migration of synthetic data, is whether long-spread SV data can constrain the shear-wave vertical velocity [Formula: see text] and the depth scale of VTI models. For homogeneous media, the residual moveout of horizontal SV events on image gathers is close to hyperbolic and depends just on the NMO velocity [Formula: see text] out to offset-to-depth ratios of about 1.7. Because [Formula: see text] differs from [Formula: see text], flattening moderate-spread gathers of SV-waves does not ensure the correct depth of the migrated events. The residual moveout rapidly becomes nonhyperbolic as the offset-to-depth ratio approaches two, with the migrated depths at long offsets strongly influenced by the SV-wave anisotropy parameter σ. Although the combination of [Formula: see text] and σ is sufficient to constrain the vertical velocity [Formula: see text] and reflector depth, the tradeoff between σ and the Thomsen parameter ε on long-spread gathers causes errors in time-to-depth conversion. The residual moveout of dipping SV events is also controlled by the parameters [Formula: see text], σ, and ε, but in the presence of dip, the contributions of both σ and ε are significant even at small offsets. For factorized v(z) VTI media with a constant SV-wave vertical-velocity gradient [Formula: see text], flattening of horizontal events for a range of depths requires the correct NMO velocity at the surface, the gradient [Formula: see text], and, for long offsets, the parameters σ and ε. On the whole, the nonnegligible uncertainty in the estimation of reflector depth from SV-wave moveout highlights the need to combine P- and SV-wave data in migration velocity analysis for VTI media.


1994 ◽  
Vol 99 (B6) ◽  
pp. 11575-11590 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.-M. Kendall ◽  
P. M. Shearer

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document