Oil Types and Source Rock-Oil Correlation on the North Slope, Alaska—A Cooperative USGS-Industry Study

2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.E. Peters ◽  
K.J. Bird ◽  
M.A. Keller ◽  
P.G. Lillis ◽  
L.B. Magoon

1969 ◽  
Author(s):  
George Gryc ◽  
Irvin L. Tailleur ◽  
William Peters Brosge
Keyword(s):  

Geophysics ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 346-358 ◽  
Author(s):  
Greg Beresford‐Smith ◽  
Rolf N. Rango

Strongly dispersive noise from surface waves can be attenuated on seismic records by Flexfil, a new prestack process which uses wavelet spreading rather than velocity as the criterion for noise discrimination. The process comprises three steps: trace‐by‐trace compression to collapse the noise to a narrow fan in time‐offset (t-x) space; muting of the noise in this narrow fan; and inverse compression to recompress the reflection signals. The process will work on spatially undersampled data. The compression is accomplished by a frequency‐domain, linear operator which is independent of trace offset. This operator is the basis of a robust method of dispersion estimation. A flexural ice wave occurs on data recorded on floating ice in the near offshore of the North Slope of Alaska. It is both highly dispersed and of broad frequency bandwidth. Application of Flexfil to these data can increase the signal‐to‐noise ratio up to 20 dB. A noise analysis obtained from a microspread record is ideal to use for dispersion estimation. Production seismic records can also be used for dispersion estimation, with less accurate results. The method applied to field data examples from Alaska demonstrates significant improvement in data quality, especially in the shallow section.


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