The Application of Non-Seismic Data in Near Surface Velocity Modeling in Surface Volcanics Area

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Zhanjun* ◽  
Feng Wenyan ◽  
Lei Dong ◽  
Jiang Wenbo
Geophysics ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-57
Author(s):  
Daniele Colombo ◽  
Ernesto Sandoval ◽  
Diego Rovetta ◽  
Apostolos Kontakis

Land seismic velocity modeling is a difficult task largely related to the description of the near surface complexities. Full waveform inversion is the method of choice for achieving high-resolution velocity mapping but its application to land seismic data faces difficulties related to complex physics, unknown and spatially varying source signatures, and low signal-to-noise ratio in the data. Large parameter variations occur in the near surface at various scales causing severe kinematic and dynamic distortions of the recorded wavefield. Some of the parameters can be incorporated in the inversion model while others, due to sub-resolution dimensions or unmodeled physics, need to be corrected through data preconditioning; a topic not well described for land data full waveform inversion applications. We have developed novel algorithms and workflows for surface-consistent data preconditioning utilizing the transmitted portion of the wavefield, signal-to-noise enhancement by generation of CMP-based virtual super shot gathers, and robust 1.5D Laplace-Fourier full waveform inversion. Our surface-consistent scheme solves residual kinematic corrections and amplitude anomalies via scalar compensation or deconvolution of the near surface response. Signal-to-noise enhancement is obtained through the statistical evaluation of volumetric prestack responses at the CMP position, or virtual super (shot) gathers. These are inverted via a novel 1.5D acoustic Laplace-Fourier full waveform inversion scheme using the Helmholtz wave equation and Hankel domain forward modeling. Inversion is performed with nonlinear conjugate gradients. The method is applied to a complex structure-controlled wadi area exhibiting faults, dissolution, collapse, and subsidence where the high resolution FWI velocity modeling helps clarifying the geological interpretation. The developed algorithms and automated workflows provide an effective solution for massive full waveform inversion of land seismic data that can be embedded in typical near surface velocity analysis procedures.


2016 ◽  
Vol 35 (11) ◽  
pp. 946-951 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florian Duret ◽  
Frederique Bertin ◽  
Katia Garceran ◽  
Raphael Sternfels ◽  
Thomas Bardainne ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 324-331
Author(s):  
Gary Murphy ◽  
Vanessa Brown ◽  
Denes Vigh

As part of a wide-reaching full-waveform inversion (FWI) research program, FWI is applied to an onshore seismic data set collected in the Delaware Basin, west Texas. FWI is routinely applied on typical marine data sets with high signal-to-noise ratio (S/N), relatively good low-frequency content, and reasonably long offsets. Land seismic data sets, in comparison, present significant challenges for FWI due to low S/N, a dearth of low frequencies, and limited offsets. Recent advancements in FWI overcome limitations due to poor S/N and low frequencies making land FWI feasible to use to update the shallow velocities. The chosen area has contrasting and variable near-surface conditions providing an excellent test data set on which to demonstrate the workflow and its challenges. An acoustic FWI workflow is used to update the near-surface velocity model in order to improve the deeper image and simultaneously help highlight potential shallow drilling hazards.


Geophysics ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
pp. S195-S206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mrinal Sinha ◽  
Gerard T. Schuster

Imaging seismic data with an erroneous migration velocity can lead to defocused migration images. To mitigate this problem, we first choose a reference reflector whose topography is well-known from the well logs, for example. Reflections from this reference layer are correlated with the traces associated with reflections from deeper interfaces to get crosscorrelograms. Interferometric least-squares migration (ILSM) is then used to get the migration image that maximizes the crosscorrelation between the observed and the predicted crosscorrelograms. Deeper reference reflectors are used to image deeper parts of the subsurface with a greater accuracy. Results on synthetic and field data show that defocusing caused by velocity errors is largely suppressed by ILSM. We have also determined that ILSM can be used for 4D surveys in which environmental conditions and acquisition parameters are significantly different from one survey to the next. The limitations of ILSM are that it requires prior knowledge of a reference reflector in the subsurface and the velocity model below the reference reflector should be accurate.


Geophysics ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 420-430 ◽  
Author(s):  
James E. Pickard

The local structure at West Cameron Block 225, offshore Louisiana, was originally interpreted as a double‐crested anticlinal feature. Production was established on both crests. A deviated well was later drilled toward the intervening saddle; the well was structurally higher than the supposed crestal wells and found three additional pay sands. The revised interpretation assumed that the structural saddle was a long period static anomaly. This interpretation produced a single anticlinal feature with substantial attic reserves. In drilling the well to tap these attic reserves, many of the expected pay sands were found to be wet or missing. The well was structurally lower relative to the previous wells at nearly all the marker beds. Velocity sag was indeed present; however, only 60 percent of the correction applied to the seismic data could be accounted for in this manner. The stacking velocity profile was modeled for the maximum velocity sag interpretation using two horizons. The modeled profiles exhibit the anticipated fluctuations, but the magnitude of the anomalies is far in excess of the observed values. Therefore, the assumption of a large long‐period static anomaly is inconsistent with the stacking velocity information, and this interpretation must be rejected. This inexpensive technique can be applied in an exploration mode, and its use is not confined to near‐surface anomalies. Accurate estimates of the width and delay of the anomaly can be obtained through iterative modeling.


2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. SR23-SR33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Cheng ◽  
Kun Jiao ◽  
Dong Sun ◽  
Zhen Xu ◽  
Denes Vigh ◽  
...  

Over the past decade, acoustic full-waveform inversion (FWI) has become one of the standard methods in the industry to construct high-resolution velocity fields from the seismic data acquired. While most of the successful applications are for marine acquisition data with rich low-frequency diving or postcritical waves at large offsets, the application of acoustic FWI on land data remains a challenging topic. Land acoustic FWI application faces many severe difficulties, such as the presence of strong elastic effects, large near-surface velocity contrast, and heterogeneous, topography variations, etc. In addition, it is well-known that low-frequency transmitted seismic energy is crucial for the success of FWI to overcome sensitivity to starting velocity fields; unfortunately, those are the parts of the data that suffer the most from a low signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) in land acquisition. We have developed an acoustic FWI application on a land data set from North Kuwait, and demonstrated our solutions to mitigate some of the challenges posed by land data. More specifically, we have developed a semblance-based high-resolution Radon (HR-Radon) inversion approach to enhance the S/N of the low-frequency part of the FWI input data and to ultimately improve the convergence of the land FWI workflow. To mitigate the impact of elastic effects, we included only the diving and postcritical early arrivals in the waveform inversion. Our results show that, with the aid of HR-Radon preconditioning and a carefully designed workflow, acoustic FWI has the ability to derive a reliable high-resolution near-surface model that could not be otherwise recovered through traditional tomographic methods.


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