Combined pre-stack and post-stack interpretation for velocity model building and hydrocarbon prospectivity: a learning case study from 3D seismic data offshore Gabon

First Break ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (12) ◽  
pp. 99-103
Author(s):  
Paolo Esestime ◽  
Milos Cvetkovic ◽  
Jonathan Rogers ◽  
Howard Nicholls ◽  
Karyna Rodriguez
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrey Bakulin ◽  
Ilya Silvestrov ◽  
Maxim Dmitriev ◽  
Dmitry Neklyudov ◽  
Maxim Protasov ◽  
...  

Geophysics ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 72 (4) ◽  
pp. P47-P56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jesse Lomask ◽  
Robert G. Clapp ◽  
Biondo Biondi

Delineating salt boundaries is a necessary step in the velocity-model building process. The salt-delineation problem can be thought of as an image-segmentation problem. Normalized cuts image segmentation (NCIS) finds the cut (or cuts) that result in an image being broken into portions which have dissimilar, by some measure, characteristics. We apply a modified version of the NCIS method to partition seismic images along salt boundaries. NCIS can track boundaries that are not continuous, where conventional horizon-tracking algorithms may fail, by calculating a weight connecting each pixel in the image to every other pixel within a local neighborhood. The weights are determined using problem-dependent combinations of attributes, the most important being instantanteous amplitude and dip. The weights for the entire image are used to segment the image via an eigenvector calculation. The weight matrices for 3D seismic data cubes can be quite large and computationally expensive. By imposing bounds and by distributing the algorithm on a parallel cluster, we significantly increase efficiency. This method is demonstrated to be effective on a 3D field seismic data cube.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farah Syazana Dzulkefli ◽  
Kefeng Xin ◽  
Ahmad Riza Ghazali ◽  
Guo Qiang ◽  
Tariq Alkhalifah

Abstract Salt is known for having a generally low density and higher velocity compared with the surrounding rock layers which causes the energy to scatter once the seismic wavefield hits the salt body and relatively less energy is transmitted through the salt to the deeper subsurface. As a result, most of imaging approaches are unable to image the base of the salt and the reservoir below the salt. Even the velocity model building such as FWI often fails to illuminate the deeper parts of salt area. In this paper, we show that Full Wavefield Redatuming (FWR) is used to retrieved and enhance the seismic data below the salt area, leading to a better seismic image quality and allowing us to focus on updating the velocity in target area below the salt. However, this redatuming approach requires a good overburden velocity model to retrieved good redatumed data. Thus, by using synthetic SEAM model, our objective is to study on the accuracy of the overburden velocity model required for imaging beneath complex overburden. The results show that the kinematic components of wave propagation are preserved through redatuming even with heavily smoothed overburden velocity model.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fatiha Gamar-Sadat ◽  
Olivier Michot ◽  
Robert Soubaras ◽  
Geoffroy Pignot ◽  
Amir Kabbej

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