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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 48, No. 8, April 2006. Pages 13-13.

Abstract: Uses, Abuses and Examples of Seismic-Derived Acoustic Impedance Previous HitDataNext Hit: What Does the Interpreter Need to Know?

By

Rebecca Latimer
Chevron Energy Technology Company
Houston

Throughout the years there has been a concerted effort to integrate the geoscience disciplines to become more adept at understanding the petroleum potential of an area. In the 1980s, geophysicists interpreted 2D seismic Previous HitdataNext Hit by overlaying log Previous HitdataNext Hit on paper seismic sections and using generalized depth-to-time curves to determine which events represented markers on the logs. Geologists interpreted cross-sections by drawing straight lines between wells to represent their correlations. Because technology advances have changed the process, many people today have become “interpreters” of 2D or Previous Hit3DNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit on workstations where the log Previous HitdataNext Hit, seismic Previous HitdataNext Hit and many derivations of the seismic Previous HitdataNext Hit (attributes, coherence, P impedance, inversions, elastic impedance, lambda rho, etc.) are available to fine-tune the analysis process. The question, however, still remains: Are we integrating the Previous HitdataNext Hit yet?

Inversion of seismic Previous HitdataNext Hit into acoustic impedance provides a natural tie to the log impedance Previous HitdataNext Hit and forces the geoscientist, in analyzing seismic Previous HitdataNext Hit, to extract appropriate wavelets, determine the phase and amplitude of the Previous HitdataNext Hit, determine whether or not the phase is stable throughout the volume and very intimately tie the well log impedance Previous HitdataNext Hit to the seismic Previous HitdataNext Hit. Utilizing inverted Previous HitdataNext Hit at the beginning of the interpretation process requires that the geoscientist understand the rock properties in the target area before embarking on an “attribute” interpretation. Even when the P impedance Previous HitdataNext Hit do not clearly distinguish between fluids or lithologies, value is added by using these Previous HitdataNext Hit as the first interpretation tool. The simplicity in knowing that the change of values represents a change in rock properties without the complexity of wavelet variability is a distinct advantage to the interpreter. This initial process is critical to undertaking any interpretation of seismic Previous HitdataNext Hit. Seismic Previous HitdataNext Hit, being an interface property, contain tuning, side lobe effects, and phase and frequency variability, making it difficult to directly determine the geology. Inverted Previous HitdataNext Hit, layer properties, are a more intuitive geologic tool that allows interpreters to utilize their natural ability to “see” the geology in the seismic Previous HitdataNext Hit.

Today, advanced impedance tools use angle-stack Previous HitdataNext Hit and shear log components that can aid in distinguishing between lithologies and hydrocarbon properties. These Previous HitdataNext Hit combine the benefits of angle Previous HitdataNext Hit, AVO, and rock properties, which—when analyzed together with an understanding of the depositional environments, stratigraphic concepts, and the myriad of seismic attributes—can greatly increase the interpretative ability of the geoscientist.

This presentation will demonstrate the necessity for inversion and explain why it is beneficial in an interpretation workflow. It will examine both the strengths and drawbacks of using inverted Previous HitdataNext Hit as compared with the seismic Previous HitdataNext Hit and the original rock Previous HitdataNext Hit. It will also show

  • how scale differences between various Previous HitdataNext Hit types can affect the results,
  • how the interpreter analyzes the rock properties and utilizes these with inverted Previous HitdataNext Hit, and
  • how to spot pitfalls in the overuse of impedance Previous HitdataTop.

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