The
thickness of many reservoirs is only a fraction of the vertical dimension
spanned by the dominant wavelength of the seismic wavelet that illuminates
and images those reservoirs. Such reservoirs are referred to as seismic
thin beds. The purpose of this module is to demonstrate how seismic
reflection amplitude can be used to interpret reservoirs that have
thicknesses less than one-fourth of the dominant wavelength of the
illuminating wavefield.
The exercise will lead you through the process of using seismic reflection
amplitude to interpret thin-bed reservoirs. As you work through the
exercise, you will examine the effects of changing the frequency content
of the illuminating seismic wavelet and will image a simple wedge
model with low-frequency and high-frequency wavelets. You will learn
what determines whether a thin bed is resolved or detected by the
illuminating wavefield. You will also consider the question "What
effect do shale stringers within a thin bed have on the thin-bed reflection
response?" This analysis will be used to develop rules to follow when
estimating net pay in heterogeneous thin beds.
As you work through the steps in the exercise, you will develop an
understanding of concepts and techniques that can be used to identify
and interpret thin beds using seismic reflection amplitudes and simple
models.
Instructor:
Bob A. Hardage
Product
Code #918
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System
Requirements