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Wikipedia

Reflection seismology

Reflection seismology (or seismic reflection) is a method of exploration geophysics that uses the principles of seismology to estimate the properties of the Earth's subsurface from reflected seismic waves. The method requires a controlled seismic source of energy, such as dynamite or Tovex blast, a specialized air gun or a seismic vibrator. Reflection seismology is similar to sonar and echolocation.

Seismic reflection data
Seismic Reflection Outlines

History edit

 
Seismic testing in 1940

Reflections and refractions of seismic waves at geologic interfaces within the Earth were first observed on recordings of earthquake-generated seismic waves. The basic model of the Earth's deep interior is based on observations of earthquake-generated seismic waves transmitted through the Earth's interior (e.g., Mohorovičić, 1910).[1] The use of human-generated seismic waves to map in detail the geology of the upper few kilometers of the Earth's crust followed shortly thereafter and has developed mainly due to commercial enterprise, particularly the petroleum industry.

Seismic reflection exploration grew out of the seismic refraction exploration method, which was used to find oil associated with salt domes.[2] Ludger Mintrop, a German mine surveyor, devised a mechanical seismograph in 1914 that he successfully used to detect salt domes in Germany. He applied for a German patent in 1919 that was issued in 1926. In 1921 he founded the company Seismos, which was hired to conduct seismic exploration in Texas and Mexico, resulting in the first commercial discovery of oil using the refraction seismic method in 1924.[3] The 1924 discovery of the Orchard salt dome in Texas led to a boom in seismic refraction exploration along the Gulf Coast, but by 1930 the method had led to the discovery of most of the shallow Louann Salt domes, and the refraction seismic method faded.[2]

After WWI, those involved in the development of commercial applications of seismic waves included Mintrop, Reginald Fessenden, John Clarence Karcher, E. A. Eckhardt, William P. Haseman, and Burton McCollum. In 1920, Haseman, Karcher, Eckhardt and McCollum founded the Geological Engineering Company. In June 1921, Karcher, Haseman, I. Perrine and W. C. Kite recorded the first exploration reflection seismograph near Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.[4]: 4–10 

Early reflection seismology was viewed with skepticism by many in the oil industry. An early advocate of the method commented:

"As one who personally tried to introduce the method into general consulting practice, the senior writer can definitely recall many times when reflections were not even considered on a par with the divining rod, for at least that device had a background of tradition."[5]

The Geological Engineering Company folded due to a drop in the price of oil. In 1925, oil prices had rebounded, and Karcher helped to form Geophysical Research Corporation (GRC) as part of the oil company Amerada. In 1930, Karcher left GRC and helped to found Geophysical Service Incorporated (GSI). GSI was one of the most successful seismic contracting companies for over 50 years and was the parent of an even more successful company, Texas Instruments. Early GSI employee Henry Salvatori left that company in 1933 to found another major seismic contractor, Western Geophysical. Many other companies using reflection seismology in hydrocarbon exploration, hydrology, engineering studies, and other applications have been formed since the method was first invented. Major service companies in recent years have included CGG, ION Geophysical, Petroleum Geo-Services, Polarcus, TGS and WesternGeco, but since the oil price crash of 2015, providers of seismic services have continued to struggle financially such as Polarcus,[6] whilst companies that were seismic acquisition industry leaders just ten years ago such as CGG[7] and WesternGeco[8] have now removed themselves from the seismic acquisition environment entirely and restructured to focus upon their existing seismic data libraries, seismic data management and non-seismic related oilfield services.

Summary of the method edit

Seismic waves are mechanical perturbations that travel in the Earth at a speed governed by the acoustic impedance of the medium in which they are travelling. The acoustic (or seismic) impedance, Z, is defined by the equation:

 ,

where v is the seismic wave velocity and ρ (Greek rho) is the density of the rock.

When a seismic wave travelling through the Earth encounters an interface between two materials with different acoustic impedances, some of the wave energy will reflect off the interface and some will refract through the interface. At its most basic, the seismic reflection technique consists of generating seismic waves and measuring the time taken for the waves to travel from the source, reflect off an interface and be detected by an array of receivers (as geophones or hydrophones) at the surface.[9] Knowing the travel times from the source to various receivers, and the velocity of the seismic waves, a geophysicist then attempts to reconstruct the pathways of the waves in order to build up an image of the subsurface.

In common with other geophysical methods, reflection seismology may be seen as a type of inverse problem. That is, given a set of data collected by experimentation and the physical laws that apply to the experiment, the experimenter wishes to develop an abstract model of the physical system being studied. In the case of reflection seismology, the experimental data are recorded seismograms, and the desired result is a model of the structure and physical properties of the Earth's crust. In common with other types of inverse problems, the results obtained from reflection seismology are usually not unique (more than one model adequately fits the data) and may be sensitive to relatively small errors in data collection, processing, or analysis.[10] For these reasons, great care must be taken when interpreting the results of a reflection seismic survey.

The reflection experiment edit

The general principle of seismic reflection is to send elastic waves (using an energy source such as dynamite explosion or Vibroseis) into the Earth, where each layer within the Earth reflects a portion of the wave's energy back and allows the rest to refract through. These reflected energy waves are recorded over a predetermined time period (called the record length) by receivers that detect the motion of the ground in which they are placed. On land, the typical receiver used is a small, portable instrument known as a geophone, which converts ground motion into an analogue electrical signal. In water, hydrophones are used, which convert pressure changes into electrical signals. Each receiver's response to a single shot is known as a “trace” and is recorded onto a data storage device, then the shot location is moved along and the process is repeated. Typically, the recorded signals are subjected to significant amounts of signal processing.[4]: 2–3, 21 

Reflection and transmission at normal incidence edit

 
P-wave reflects off an interface at normal incidence

When a seismic P-wave encounters a boundary between two materials with different acoustic impedances, some of the energy in the wave will be reflected at the boundary, while some of the energy will be transmitted through the boundary. The amplitude of the reflected wave is predicted by multiplying the amplitude of the incident wave by the seismic reflection coefficient  , determined by the impedance contrast between the two materials.[4]

For a wave that hits a boundary at normal incidence (head-on), the expression for the reflection coefficient is simply

 ,

where   and   are the impedance of the first and second medium, respectively.[4]

Similarly, the amplitude of the incident wave is multiplied by the transmission coefficient   to predict the amplitude of the wave transmitted through the boundary. The formula for the normal-incidence transmission coefficient is

 .[4]

As the sum of the energies of the reflected and transmitted wave has to be equal to the energy of the incident wave, it is easy to show that

 .

By observing changes in the strength of reflections, seismologists can infer changes in the seismic impedances. In turn, they use this information to infer changes in the properties of the rocks at the interface, such as density and wave velocity,[4] by means of seismic inversion.

Reflection and transmission at non-normal incidence edit

 
Diagram showing the mode conversions that occur when a P-wave reflects off an interface at non-normal incidence

The situation becomes much more complicated in the case of non-normal incidence, due to mode conversion between P-waves and S-waves, and is described by the Zoeppritz equations. In 1919, Karl Zoeppritz derived 4 equations that determine the amplitudes of reflected and refracted waves at a planar interface for an incident P-wave as a function of the angle of incidence and six independent elastic parameters.[9] These equations have 4 unknowns and can be solved but they do not give an intuitive understanding for how the reflection amplitudes vary with the rock properties involved.[11]

The reflection and transmission coefficients, which govern the amplitude of each reflection, vary with angle of incidence and can be used to obtain information about (among many other things) the fluid content of the rock. Practical use of non-normal incidence phenomena, known as AVO (see amplitude versus offset) has been facilitated by theoretical work to derive workable approximations to the Zoeppritz equations and by advances in computer processing capacity. AVO studies attempt with some success to predict the fluid content (oil, gas, or water) of potential reservoirs, to lower the risk of drilling unproductive wells and to identify new petroleum reservoirs. The 3-term simplification of the Zoeppritz equations that is most commonly used was developed in 1985 and is known as the "Shuey equation". A further 2-term simplification is known as the "Shuey approximation", is valid for angles of incidence less than 30 degrees (usually the case in seismic surveys) and is given below:[12]

 

where   = reflection coefficient at zero-offset (normal incidence);   = AVO gradient, describing reflection behaviour at intermediate offsets and   = angle of incidence. This equation reduces to that of normal incidence at  =0.

Interpretation of reflections edit

The time it takes for a reflection from a particular boundary to arrive at the geophone is called the travel time. If the seismic wave velocity in the rock is known, then the travel time may be used to estimate the depth to the reflector. For a simple vertically traveling wave, the travel time   from the surface to the reflector and back is called the Two-Way Time (TWT) and is given by the formula

 ,

where   is the depth of the reflector and   is the wave velocity in the rock.[4]: 81 

A series of apparently related reflections on several seismograms is often referred to as a reflection event. By correlating reflection events, a seismologist can create an estimated cross-section of the geologic structure that generated the reflections.[4]: 196–199 

Sources of noise edit

 
Sources of noise on a seismic record. Top-left: air wave; top-right: head wave; bottom-left: surface wave; bottom-right: multiple.

In addition to reflections off interfaces within the subsurface, there are a number of other seismic responses detected by receivers and are either unwanted or unneeded:

Air wave edit

The airwave travels directly from the source to the receiver and is an example of coherent noise. It is easily recognizable because it travels at a speed of 330 m/s, the speed of sound in air.

Ground roll / Rayleigh wave / Scholte wave / Surface wave edit

A Rayleigh wave typically propagates along a free surface of a solid, but the elastic constants and density of air are very low compared to those of rocks so the surface of the Earth is approximately a free surface. Low velocity, low frequency and high amplitude Rayleigh waves are frequently present on a seismic record and can obscure signal, degrading overall data quality. They are known within the industry as ‘Ground Roll’ and are an example of coherent noise that can be attenuated with a carefully designed seismic survey.[13] The Scholte wave is similar to ground roll but occurs at the sea-floor (fluid/solid interface) and it can possibly obscure and mask deep reflections in marine seismic records.[14] The velocity of these waves varies with wavelength, so they are said to be dispersive and the shape of the wavetrain varies with distance.[15]

Refraction / Head wave / Conical wave edit

A head wave refracts at an interface, travelling along it, within the lower medium and produces oscillatory motion parallel to the interface. This motion causes a disturbance in the upper medium that is detected on the surface.[9] The same phenomenon is utilised in seismic refraction.

Multiple reflection edit

An event on the seismic record that has incurred more than one reflection is called a multiple. Multiples can be either short-path (peg-leg) or long-path, depending upon whether they interfere with primary reflections or not.[16][17]

Multiples from the bottom of a body of water and the air-water interface are common in marine seismic data, and are suppressed by seismic processing.

Cultural noise edit

Cultural noise includes noise from weather effects, planes, helicopters, electrical pylons, and ships (in the case of marine surveys), all of which can be detected by the receivers.

Electromagnetic noise edit

Particularly important in urban environments (i.e. power lines), it is hardly removable. Some particular sensor as microelectromechanical systems (MEMs) are used to decrease these interference when in such environments.[18]

2D versus 3D edit

The original seismic reflection method involved acquisition along a two-dimensional vertical profile through the crust, now referred to as 2D data. This approach worked well with areas of relatively simple geological structure where dips are low. However, in areas of more complex structure, the 2D technique failed to properly image the subsurface due to out of plane reflections and other artefacts. Spatial aliasing is also an issue with 2D data due to the lack of resolution between the lines. Beginning with initial experiments in the 1960s, the seismic technique explored the possibility of full three-dimensional acquisition and processing. In the late 1970s the first large 3D datasets were acquired and by the 1980s and 1990s this method became widely used.[19][20]

Applications edit

Reflection seismology is used extensively in a number of fields and its applications can be categorised into three groups,[21] each defined by their depth of investigation:

  • Near-surface applications – an application that aims to understand geology at depths of up to approximately 1 km, typically used for engineering and environmental surveys, as well as coal[22] and mineral exploration.[23] A more recently developed application for seismic reflection is for geothermal energy surveys,[24] although the depth of investigation can be up to 2 km deep in this case.[25]
  • Hydrocarbon exploration – used by the hydrocarbon industry to provide a high resolution map of acoustic impedance contrasts at depths of up to 10 km within the subsurface. This can be combined with seismic attribute analysis and other exploration geophysics tools and used to help geologists build a geological model of the area of interest.
  • Mineral exploration – The traditional approach to near-surface (<300 m) mineral exploration has been to employ geological mapping, geochemical analysis and the use of aerial and ground-based potential field methods, in particular for greenfield exploration,[26] in the recent decades reflection seismic has become a valid method for exploration in hard-rock environments.
  • Crustal studies – investigation into the structure and origin of the Earth's crust, through to the Moho discontinuity and beyond, at depths of up to 100 km.

A method similar to reflection seismology which uses electromagnetic instead of elastic waves, and has a smaller depth of penetration, is known as Ground-penetrating radar or GPR.

Hydrocarbon exploration edit

Reflection seismology, more commonly referred to as "seismic reflection" or abbreviated to "seismic" within the hydrocarbon industry, is used by petroleum geologists and geophysicists to map and interpret potential petroleum reservoirs. The size and scale of seismic surveys has increased alongside the significant increases in computer power since the late 20th century. This led the seismic industry from laboriously – and therefore rarely – acquiring small 3D surveys in the 1980s to routinely acquiring large-scale high resolution 3D surveys. The goals and basic principles have remained the same, but the methods have slightly changed over the years.

The primary environments for seismic hydrocarbon exploration are land, the transition zone and marine:

Land – The land environment covers almost every type of terrain that exists on Earth, each bringing its own logistical problems. Examples of this environment are jungle, desert, arctic tundra, forest, urban settings, mountain regions and savannah.

Transition Zone (TZ) – The transition zone is considered to be the area where the land meets the sea, presenting unique challenges because the water is too shallow for large seismic vessels but too deep for the use of traditional methods of acquisition on land. Examples of this environment are river deltas, swamps and marshes,[27] coral reefs, beach tidal areas and the surf zone. Transition zone seismic crews will often work on land, in the transition zone and in the shallow water marine environment on a single project in order to obtain a complete map of the subsurface.

 
Diagram of equipment used for marine seismic surveys

Marine – The marine zone is either in shallow water areas (water depths of less than 30 to 40 metres would normally be considered shallow water areas for 3D marine seismic operations) or in the deep water areas normally associated with the seas and oceans (such as the Gulf of Mexico).

Seismic data acquisition edit

Seismic data acquisition is the first of the three distinct stages of seismic exploration, the other two being seismic data processing and seismic interpretation.[28]

Seismic surveys are typically designed by National oil companies and International oil companies who hire service companies such as CGG, Petroleum Geo-Services and WesternGeco to acquire them. Another company is then hired to process the data, although this can often be the same company that acquired the survey. Finally the finished seismic volume is delivered to the oil company so that it can be geologically interpreted.

Land survey acquisition edit

 
Desert land seismic camp
 
Receiver line on a desert land crew with recorder truck

Land seismic surveys tend to be large entities, requiring hundreds of tons of equipment and employing anywhere from a few hundred to a few thousand people, deployed over vast areas for many months.[29] There are a number of options available for a controlled seismic source in a land survey and particularly common choices are Vibroseis and dynamite. Vibroseis is a non-impulsive source that is cheap and efficient but requires flat ground to operate on, making its use more difficult in undeveloped areas. The method comprises one or more heavy, all-terrain vehicles lowering a steel plate onto the ground, which is then vibrated with a specific frequency distribution and amplitude.[30] It produces a low energy density, allowing it to be used in cities and other built-up areas where dynamite would cause significant damage, though the large weight attached to a Vibroseis truck can cause its own environmental damage.[31] Dynamite is an impulsive source that is regarded as the ideal geophysical source due to it producing an almost perfect impulse function but it has obvious environmental drawbacks. For a long time, it was the only seismic source available until weight dropping was introduced around 1954,[32] allowing geophysicists to make a trade-off between image quality and environmental damage. Compared to Vibroseis, dynamite is also operationally inefficient because each source point needs to be drilled and the dynamite placed in the hole.

Unlike in marine seismic surveys, land geometries are not limited to narrow paths of acquisition, meaning that a wide range of offsets and azimuths is usually acquired and the largest challenge is increasing the rate of acquisition. The rate of production is obviously controlled by how fast the source (Vibroseis in this case) can be fired and then move on to the next source location. Attempts have been made to use multiple seismic sources at the same time in order to increase survey efficiency and a successful example of this technique is Independent Simultaneous Sweeping (ISS).[33]

A land seismic survey requires substantial logistical support; in addition to the day-to-day seismic operation itself, there must also be support for the main camp for resupply activities, medical support, camp and equipment maintenance tasks, security, personnel crew changes and waste management. Some operations may also operate smaller 'fly' camps that are set up remotely where the distance is too far to travel back to the main camp on a daily basis and these will also need logistical support on a frequent basis.

Marine survey acquisition (Towed Streamer) edit

 
R/V Western Legend seismic survey vessel
 
Marine seismic survey using a towed streamer
 
Plan view of NATS and MAZ surveys
 
Plan view of a WATS/WAZ survey
 
Seismic data collected by the USGS in the Gulf of Mexico
 
Seismic support vessel
 
Litton 3 km marine streamer
 
Litton LP gun strings (energy source)

Towed streamer marine seismic surveys are conducted using specialist seismic vessels that tow one or more cables known as streamers just below the surface typically between 5 and 15 metres depending upon the project specification that contain groups of hydrophones (or receiver groups) along their length (see diagram). Modern streamer vessels normally tow multiple streamers astern which can be secured to underwater wings, commonly known as doors or vanes that allow a number of streamers to be towed out wide to the port and starboard side of a vessel. Current streamer towing technology such as seen on the PGS operated Ramform series of vessels built between 2013 and 2017[34] has pushed the number of streamers up to 24 in total on these vessels. For vessels of this type of capacity, it is not uncommon for a streamer spread across the stern from 'door to door' to be in excess on one nautical mile. The precise configuration of the streamers on any project in terms of streamer length, streamer separation, hydrophone group length and the offset or distance between the source centre and the receivers will be dependent upon the geological area of interest below the sea floor that the client is trying to get data from.

Streamer vessels also tow high energy sources, principally high pressure air gun arrays that operate at 2000psi that fire together to the create a tuned energy pulse into the seabed from which the reflected energy waves are recorded on the streamer receiver groups. Gun arrays are tuned, that is the frequency response of the resulting air bubble from the array when fired can be changed depending upon the combination and number of guns in a specific array and their individual volumes. Guns can be located individual on an array or can be combined to form clusters. Typically, source arrays have a volume of 2000 cubic inches to 7000 cubic inches, but this will depend upon the specific geology of the survey area.

Marine seismic surveys generate a significant quantity of data [35] due to the size of modern towed streamer vessels and their towing capabilities.

A seismic vessel with 2 sources and towing a single streamer is known as a Narrow-Azimuth Towed Streamer (or NAZ or NATS). By the early 2000s, it was accepted that this type of acquisition was useful for initial exploration but inadequate for development and production,[36] in which wells had to be accurately positioned. This led to the development of the Multi-Azimuth Towed Streamer (MAZ) which tried to break the limitations of the linear acquisition pattern of a NATS survey by acquiring a combination of NATS surveys at different azimuths (see diagram).[37] This successfully delivered increased illumination of the subsurface and a better signal to noise ratio.

The seismic properties of salt poses an additional problem for marine seismic surveys, it attenuates seismic waves and its structure contains overhangs that are difficult to image. This led to another variation on the NATS survey type, the wide-azimuth towed streamer (or WAZ or WATS) and was first tested on the Mad Dog field in 2004.[38] This type of survey involved 1 vessel solely towing a set of 8 streamers and 2 separate vessels towing seismic sources that were located at the start and end of the last receiver line (see diagram). This configuration was "tiled" 4 times, with the receiver vessel moving further away from the source vessels each time and eventually creating the effect of a survey with 4 times the number of streamers. The end result was a seismic dataset with a larger range of wider azimuths, delivering a breakthrough in seismic imaging.[36] These are now the three common types of marine towed streamer seismic surveys.

Marine survey acquisition (Ocean Bottom Seismic (OBS)) edit

Marine survey acquisition is not just limited to seismic vessels; it is also possible to lay cables of geophones and hydrophones on the sea bed in a similar way to how cables are used in a land seismic survey, and use a separate source vessel. This method was originally developed out of operational necessity in order to enable seismic surveys to be conducted in areas with obstructions, such as production platforms, without having the compromise the resultant image quality.[39] Ocean bottom cables (OBC) are also extensively used in other areas that a seismic vessel cannot be used, for example in shallow marine (water depth <300m) and transition zone environments, and can be deployed by remotely operated underwater vehicles (ROVs) in deep water when repeatability is valued (see 4D, below). Conventional OBC surveys use dual-component receivers, combining a pressure sensor (hydrophone) and a vertical particle velocity sensor (vertical geophone), but more recent developments have expanded the method to use four-component sensors i.e. a hydrophone and three orthogonal geophones. Four-component sensors have the advantage of being able to also record shear waves,[40] which do not travel through water but can still contain valuable information.

In addition to the operational advantages, OBC also has geophysical advantages over a conventional NATS survey that arise from the increased fold and wider range of azimuths associated with the survey geometry.[41] However, much like a land survey, the wider azimuths and increased fold come at a cost and the ability for large-scale OBC surveys is severely limited.

In 2005, ocean bottom nodes (OBN) – an extension of the OBC method that uses battery-powered cableless receivers placed in deep water – was first trialled over the Atlantis Oil Field in a partnership between BP and Fairfield Geotechnologies.[42] The placement of these nodes can be more flexible than the cables in OBC and they are easier to store and deploy due to their smaller size and lower weight.

Marine survey acquisition (Ocean Bottom Nodes (OBN)) edit

 
Large node surveys can create a significant requirement for secure and well serviced storage areas

The development of node technology came as a direct development from that of ocean bottom cable technology, i.e. that ability to place a hydrophone in direct contact with the seafloor to eliminate the seafloor to hydrophone sea water space that exists with towed streamer technology. The ocean bottom hydrophone concept itself is not new and has been used for many years in scientific research, but its rapid use as a data acquisition methodology in oil and gas exploration is relatively recent.

Nodes are self-contained 4-component units which include a hydrophone and three horizontal and vertical axis orientation sensors. Their physical dimensions vary depending on the design requirement and the manufacturer, but in general nodes tend to weigh in excess of 10 kilograms per unit to counteract buoyancy issues and to lessen the chance of movement on the seabed due to currents or tides.

Nodes are usable in areas where streamer vessels may not be able to safely enter and so for the safe navigation of node vessels and prior to the deployment of nodes, a bathymetry seabed survey is normally conducted of the survey area using side-scan technology to map the seabed topography in detail. This will identify any possible hazards that could impact the safe navigation of node and source vessels and also to identify any issues for node deployment including subsea obstructions, wrecks, oilfield infrastructure or sudden changes in water depths from underwater cliffs, canyons or other locations where nodes may not be stable or not make a good connection to the seabed.

Unlike OBC operations, a node vessel does not connect to a node line, whereas ocean bottom cables need to be physically attached to a recorder vessel to record data in real-time. With nodes, until the nodes are recovered and the data reaped from them (reaping is the industry term used to remove data from a recovered node when it is placed within a computerised system that copies the hard drive data from the node), there is an assumption that the data will be recorded as there is no real-time quality control element to a node's operating status as they are self-contained and not connected to any system once they are deployed. The technology is now well-established and very reliable and once a node and its battery system has passed all of its set up criteria there is a high degree of confidence that a node will work as specified. Technical downtime during node projects, i.e. individual node failures during deployment are usually in single figures as a percentage of the total nodes deployed.

Nodes are powered by either rechargeable internal Lithium-ion battery packs or replaceable non-rechargeable batteries - the design and the specification of the node will determine what battery technology is used. The battery life of a node unit is a critical consideration in the design of a node project; this is because once the battery runs out on a node, the data that has been collected is no longer stored on the solid-state hard drive and all data recorded since it was deployed on the sea floor will be lost. Therefore, a node with a 30-day battery life must be deployed, record data, be recovered and reaped within that 30-day period. This also ties in with the number of nodes that are to be deployed as this is closely related to battery life too. If too many nodes are deployed and the OBN crew's resources are not sufficient to recover these in time or external factors such as adverse weather limits recovery operations, batteries can expire and data can be lost. Disposable or non-rechargeable batteries can also create a significant waste management issue as batteries must be transported to and from an operation and the drained batteries disposed of by a licensed contractor ashore.

Another important consideration is that of synchronising the timing of individual node clock units with an internal clock drift correction. Any error in synchronising nodes properly before they are deployed can create unusable data. Because node acquisition is often multi-directional and from a number of sources simultaneously across a 24-hour time frame, for accurate data processing it is vital that all of the nodes are working to the same clock time.

The node type and specification will determine the node handling system design and the deployment and recovery modes. At present there are two mainstream approaches; node on a rope and ROV operations.

Node on a rope

This method requires the node to be attached to a steel wire or a high specification rope. Each node will be evenly spaced along the rope which will have special fittings to securely connect the node to the rope, for example every 50 metres depending upon the prospect design. This rope is then laid by a specialist node vessel using an node handling system, usually with dynamic positioning along a pre-defined node line. The nodes are ‘landed’ onto pre-plotted positions with an agreed and acceptable error radius, for example, a node must be placed within a 12.5 metre radius from the navigation pre-plot positions. They are often accompanied by pingers, small transponders that can be detected by an underwater acoustic positioning transducer which allows a pinging vessel or the node vessel itself to establish a definite sea floor position for each node on deployment. Depending on the contract, pingers can be located on every node or every third node, for example. Pinging and pinging equipment is the industry shorthand for the use of USBL or Ultra-short baseline acoustic positioning systems which are interfaced with vessel based differential GPS or Differential Global Positioning System navigation equipment.

Node lines are usually recovered by anchor or grapple hook dragging to recover the node line back on board the vessel. Handling systems on node vessels are used to store, deploy and recover nodes and their specific design will depend upon the node design. Small nodes can include a manual handling element whereas larger nodes are automatically handled by robotic systems for moving, storing, recharging and reaping nodes. Node vessels also use systems such as spoolers to manage rope lines and rope bins to store the many kilometres of ropes often carried onboard node on a rope vessels.

Node on a rope is normally used where there is shallow water within the prospect, for example less than 100 metres or a transition zone area close to a beach. For deeper water operations, a dynamic positioning vessel is used to ensure accurate deployment of nodes, but these larger vessels have a limitation as to how far into shore they can safely navigate into; the usual cutoff will be between 15 and 20 metres water depth depending on the vessel and its in-water equipment. Specialist shallow water boats can then be used for deploying and recovering nodes in water depths as shallow as 1 to 3 metres. These shallow water nodes can then be used to tie-in with geophones on the shore to provide a consistent seismic line transition from water to land.

There are some issues with this approach which make them vulnerable to damage or loss on a project and these all must be risk assessed and mitigated. Since nodes connected together on a rope sit on the sea floor unattended: they can be moved due to strong currents, the ropes can snag on seabed obstructions, they can be dragged by third party vessel anchors and caught by trawling fishing vessels. The threat of these types of potential hazards to this equipment should normally be identified and assessed during the project planning phase, especially in oilfield locations where well heads, pipelines and other subsea structures exist and where any contact with these must be avoided, normally achieved by adopting exclusion zones. Since it is possible for node lines to be moved after deployment, the issue of node position on recovery is critical and therefore positioning during both deployment and recovery is a standard navigation quality control check. In some case, node lines may need to be recovered and re-laid if the nodes have moved outside of the contract specifications.

ROV deployment

This method utilises ROV (remotely operated underwater vehicle) technology to handle and place nodes at their pre-plotted positions. This type of deployment and recovery method uses a basket full of nodes which is lowered into the water. An ROV will connect with the compatible node basket and remove individual nodes from a tray in a pre-defined order. Each node will be placed on its allocated pre-plot position. On recovery, the process works in reverse; the node to be recovered is picked up by the ROV, placed into the node basket tray until the basket is full when it is lifted back to the surface. The basket is recovered onto the node vessel, the nodes are removed from the basket and reaped.

ROV operations are normally used for deep water node projects, often in water depths to 3000 metres in the open ocean. However, there are some issues with ROV operations that need to be considered. ROV operations tend to be complex, especially deep water ROV operations and so the periodic maintenance demands may impact upon production. Umbilical's and other high technology spares for ROV's can be extremely expensive and repairs to ROVs which require onshore or third-party specialist support will stop a node project. Due to extreme water depths, the node deployment and recovery production rate will be much lower due to the time for node basket transit from surface to seafloor and there will almost certainly be weather or sea condition limitation for ROV operations in open ocean areas. The logistics for supporting operations far from shore can also be problematic for regular resupply, bunkering and crew change activities.

Time lapse acquisition (4D) edit

Time lapse or 4D surveys are 3D seismic surveys repeated after a period of time, the 4D term refers to the fourth dimension which in this case is time. Time lapse surveys are acquired in order to observe reservoir changes during production and identify areas where there are barriers to flow that may not be detectable in conventional seismic. Time lapse surveys consist of a baseline survey and a monitor or repeat survey, acquired after the field has been in production. Most of these surveys have been repeated NATS surveys as they are cheaper to acquire and most fields historically already had a NATS baseline survey. Some of these surveys are collected using ocean-bottom cables because the cables can be accurately placed in their previous location after being removed. Better repetition of the exact source and receiver location leads to improved repeatability and better signal to noise ratios. A number of 4D surveys have also been set up over fields in which ocean bottom cables have been purchased and permanently deployed. This method can be known as life of field seismic (LoFS) or permanent reservoir monitoring (PRM).[36]

4D seismic surveys using towed streamer technology can be very challenging as the aim of a 4D survey it to repeat the original or baseline survey as accurately as possible. Weather, tides, current and even the time of year can have a significant impact upon how accurately such a survey can achieve that repeatability goal.

OBN has proven to be another very good way to accurately repeat a seismic acquisition. The world's first 4D survey using nodes was acquired over the Atlantis Oil Field in 2009, with the nodes being placed by a ROV in a water depth of 1300–2200 metres to within a few metres of where they were previously placed in 2005.[43]

Seismic data processing edit

There are three main processes in seismic data processing: deconvolution, common-midpoint (CMP) stacking and migration.[44]

Deconvolution is a process that tries to extract the reflectivity series of the Earth, under the assumption that a seismic trace is just the reflectivity series of the Earth convolved with distorting filters.[45] This process improves temporal resolution by collapsing the seismic wavelet, but it is nonunique unless further information is available such as well logs, or further assumptions are made. Deconvolution operations can be cascaded, with each individual deconvolution designed to remove a particular type of distortion.

CMP stacking is a robust process that uses the fact that a particular location in the subsurface will have been sampled numerous times and at different offsets. This allows a geophysicist to construct a group of traces with a range of offsets that all sample the same subsurface location, known as a Common Midpoint Gather.[46] The average amplitude is then calculated along a time sample, resulting in significantly lowering the random noise but also losing all valuable information about the relationship between seismic amplitude and offset. Less significant processes that are applied shortly before the CMP stack are Normal moveout correction and statics correction. Unlike marine seismic data, land seismic data has to be corrected for the elevation differences between the shot and receiver locations. This correction is in the form of a vertical time shift to a flat datum and is known as a statics correction, but will need further correcting later in the processing sequence because the velocity of the near-surface is not accurately known. This further correction is known as a residual statics correction.

Seismic migration is the process by which seismic events are geometrically re-located in either space or time to the location the event occurred in the subsurface rather than the location that it was recorded at the surface, thereby creating a more accurate image of the subsurface.

Seismic interpretation edit

 

The goal of seismic interpretation is to obtain a coherent geological story from the map of processed seismic reflections.[47] At its most simple level, seismic interpretation involves tracing and correlating along continuous reflectors throughout the 2D or 3D dataset and using these as the basis for the geological interpretation. The aim of this is to produce structural maps that reflect the spatial variation in depth of certain geological layers. Using these maps hydrocarbon traps can be identified and models of the subsurface can be created that allow volume calculations to be made. However, a seismic dataset rarely gives a picture clear enough to do this. This is mainly because of the vertical and horizontal seismic resolution[48] but often noise and processing difficulties also result in a lower quality picture. Due to this, there is always a degree of uncertainty in a seismic interpretation and a particular dataset could have more than one solution that fits the data. In such a case, more data will be needed to constrain the solution, for example in the form of further seismic acquisition, borehole logging or gravity and magnetic survey data. Similarly to the mentality of a seismic processor, a seismic interpreter is generally encouraged to be optimistic in order encourage further work rather than the abandonment of the survey area.[49] Seismic interpretation is completed by both geologists and geophysicists, with most seismic interpreters having an understanding of both fields.

In hydrocarbon exploration, the features that the interpreter is particularly trying to delineate are the parts that make up a petroleum reservoir – the source rock, the reservoir rock, the seal and trap.

Seismic attribute analysis edit

Seismic attribute analysis involves extracting or deriving a quantity from seismic data that can be analysed in order to enhance information that might be more subtle in a traditional seismic image, leading to a better geological or geophysical interpretation of the data.[50] Examples of attributes that can be analysed include mean amplitude, which can lead to the delineation of bright spots and dim spots, coherency and amplitude versus offset. Attributes that can show the presence of hydrocarbons are called direct hydrocarbon indicators.

Crustal studies edit

The use of reflection seismology in studies of tectonics and the Earth's crust was pioneered in the 1970s by groups such as the Consortium for Continental Reflection Profiling (COCORP), who inspired deep seismic exploration in other countries such as BIRPS in Great Britain and ECORS in France.[51] The British Institutions Reflection Profiling Syndicate (BIRPS) was started up as a result of oil hydrocarbon exploration in the North Sea. It became clear that there was a lack of understanding of the tectonic processes that had formed the geological structures and sedimentary basins which were being explored. The effort produced some significant results and showed that it is possible to profile features such as thrust faults that penetrate through the crust to the upper mantle with marine seismic surveys.[52]

Environmental impact edit

As with all human activities, seismic reflection surveys have some impact on the Earth's natural environment and both the hydrocarbon industry and environmental groups partake in research to investigate these effects.

Land edit

On land, conducting a seismic survey may require the building of roads, for transporting equipment and personnel, and vegetation may need to be cleared for the deployment of equipment. If the survey is in a relatively undeveloped area, significant habitat disturbance may occur and many governments require seismic companies to follow strict rules regarding destruction of the environment; for example, the use of dynamite as a seismic source may be disallowed. Seismic processing techniques allow for seismic lines to deviate around natural obstacles, or use pre-existing non-straight tracks and trails. With careful planning, this can greatly reduce the environmental impact of a land seismic survey. The more recent use of inertial navigation instruments for land survey instead of theodolites decreased the impact of seismic by allowing the winding of survey lines between trees.

The potential impact of any seismic survey on land needs to be assessed at the planning stage and managed effectively. Well regulated environments would generally require Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) or Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) reports prior to any work starting. Project planning also needs to recognise that once a project has completed, what impact if any, will be left behind. It is the contractors and clients responsibility to manage the remediation plan as per the contract and as per the laws where the project has been conducted.

Depending upon the size of a project, land seismic operations can have a significant local impact and a sizeable physical footprint, especially where storage facilities, camp utilities, waste management facilities (including black and grey water management), general and seismic vehicle parking areas, workshops and maintenance facilities and living accommodation are required. Contact with local people can cause potential disruptions to their normal lives such as increased noise, 24-hour operations and increased traffic and these have to be assessed and mitigated.

Archeological considerations are also important and project planning must accommodate legal, cultural and social requirements that will have to be considered. Specialist techniques can be used to assessed safe working distances from buildings and archeological structures to minimise their impact and prevent damage.

Marine edit

The main environmental concern for marine seismic surveys is the potential for noise associated with the high-energy seismic source to disturb or injure animal life, especially cetaceans such as whales, porpoises, and dolphins, as these mammals use sound as their primary method of communication with one another.[53] High-level and long-duration sound can cause physical damage, such as hearing loss, whereas lower-level noise can cause temporary threshold shifts in hearing, obscuring sounds that are vital to marine life, or behavioural disturbance.[54]

A study has shown[55] that migrating humpback whales will leave a minimum 3 km gap between themselves and an operating seismic vessel, with resting humpback whale pods with cows exhibiting increased sensitivity and leaving an increased gap of 7–12 km. Conversely, the study found that male humpback whales were attracted to a single operating airgun as they were believed to have confused the low-frequency sound with that of whale breaching behaviour. In addition to whales, sea turtles, fish and squid all showed alarm and avoidance behaviour in the presence of an approaching seismic source. It is difficult to compare reports on the effects of seismic survey noise on marine life because methods and units are often inadequately documented.

The gray whale will avoid its regular migratory and feeding grounds by >30 km in areas of seismic testing.[citation needed] Similarly the breathing of gray whales was shown to be more rapid, indicating discomfort and panic in the whale. It is circumstantial evidence such as this that has led researchers to believe that avoidance and panic might be responsible for increased whale beachings although research is ongoing into these questions.

Even so, airguns are shut down only when cetaceans are seen at very close range, usually under 1 km[56]

Offering another point of view, a joint paper from the International Association of Geophysical Contractors (IAGC) and the International Association of Oil and Gas Producers (IOGP) argue that the noise created by marine seismic surveys is comparable to natural sources of seismic noise, stating:[57]

The UK government organisation, the Joint Nature Conservation Committee (more commonly known as JNCC) is "...the public body that advises the UK Government and devolved administrations on UK-wide and international nature conservation."[58] has had a long term vested interest in the impact of geophysical or seismic surveys on the marine environment for many years. Even back in the 1990s, it was understood at a government level that the impact of the sound energy produced by seismic surveys needed to be investigated and monitored.[59] JNCC guidelines have been and continue to be one of the references used internationally as a possible baseline standard for surveys in seismic contracts world-wide, such as the 'JNCC guidelines for minimising the risk of injury to marine mammals from geophysical surveys (seismic survey guidelines)', 2017.[60]

A complicating factor in the discussion of seismic sound energy as a disruptive factor to marine mammals is that of the size and scale of seismic surveys as they are conducted into the 21st century. Historically, seismic surveys tended to have a duration of weeks or months and to be localised, but with OBN technology, surveys can cover thousands of square kilometres of ocean and can continue for years, all of the time putting sound energy into the ocean 24 hours a day from multiple energy sources. One current example of this is the 85,000 square kilometre mega seismic survey contract [61] signed by the Abu Dhabi national oil company ADNOC in 2018 with an estimated duration into 2024 across a range of deep-water areas, coastal areas, islands and shallow water locations. It may be very difficult to assess the long-term impact of these huge operations on marine life.

In 2017, IOGP recommended[62] that, to avoid disturbance whilst surveying:

  • Protective measures are employed to address site-specific environmental conditions of each operation to ensure that sound exposure and vessel traffic do not harm marine mammals.
  • Surveys planned to avoid known sensitive areas and time periods, such as breeding and feeding areas.
  • Exclusion zones are typically established around the seismic source to further protect marine fauna from any potentially detrimental effects of sound. The exclusion zone is typically a circle with a radius of at least 500 meters around the sound source.
  • Trained observers and listening devices are used to visually and acoustically monitor that zone for marine mammals and other protected species before any sound-producing operations begin. These observers help ensure adherence to the protective practices during operations and their detailed reports provide information on the biodiversity of the survey area to the local governments.
  • Sound production typically begins with a “soft-start” or “ramp-up” that involves a gradual increase of the sound level from the air gun source from a very low level to full operational levels at the beginning of the seismic lines – usually over 20 to 40 minutes. This soft-start procedure is intended to allow time for any animal that may be close to the sound source to move away as the sound grows louder.

As second factor is the regulatory environment where the seismic survey is taking place. In highly regulated locations such as the North Sea or the Gulf of Mexico, the legal requirements will be clearly stated at the contract level and both contractor and client will comply with the regulations as the consequences of non-compliance can be severe such as substantial fines or withdrawal of permits for exploration blocks. However, there are some countries which have a varied and rich marine biome but where the environmental laws are weak and where a regulator is ineffective or even non-existent. This situation, where the regulatory framework is not robust can severely compromise any attempts at protecting marine environments: this is frequently found where state-owned oil and gas companies are dominant in a country and where the regulator is also a state-owned and operated entity and therefore it is not considered to be truly independent.

See also edit

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Further reading edit

The following books cover important topics in reflection seismology. Most require some knowledge of mathematics, geology, and/or physics at the university level or above.

  • Brown, Alistair R. (2004). Interpretation of three-dimensional seismic data (sixth ed.). Society of Exploration Geophysicists and American Association of Petroleum Geologists. ISBN 0-89181-364-0.
  • Biondi, B. (2006). 3d Seismic Imaging: Three Dimensional Seismic Imaging. Society of Exploration Geophysicists. ISBN 0-07-011117-0.
  • Claerbout, Jon F. (1976). Fundamentals of geophysical data processing. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 1-56080-137-9.
  • Ikelle, Luc T. & Lasse Amundsen (2005). Introduction to Petroleum Seismology. Society of Exploration Geophysicists. ISBN 1-56080-129-8.
  • Scales, John (1997). . Golden, Colorado: Samizdat Press. Archived from the original on 18 August 2015.
  • Yilmaz, Öz (2001). Seismic data analysis. Society of Exploration Geophysicists. ISBN 1-56080-094-1.
  • Milsom, J., University College of London (2005). Field Geophysics. Wiley Publications. ISBN 978-0-470-84347-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Chapman, C.H.. (2004). Fundamentals of Seismic Wave Propagation. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-81538-3.

Further research in reflection seismology may be found particularly in books and journals of the Society of Exploration Geophysicists, the American Geophysical Union, and the European Association of Geoscientists and Engineers.

External links edit

  • – Geophysical Society of Tulsa
  • Reflection Seismology Literature at Stanford Exploration Project
  • Website of the International Association of Geophysical Contractors
  • (PDF)
  • Information about using Seismic Survey in oil and gas exploration in Australia 13 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine

reflection, seismology, this, article, about, surface, seismic, surveys, related, process, vertical, seismic, profile, this, article, confusing, unclear, readers, please, help, clarify, article, there, might, discussion, about, this, talk, page, october, 2017,. This article is about surface seismic surveys For a related process see Vertical seismic profile This article may be confusing or unclear to readers Please help clarify the article There might be a discussion about this on the talk page October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Reflection seismology or seismic reflection is a method of exploration geophysics that uses the principles of seismology to estimate the properties of the Earth s subsurface from reflected seismic waves The method requires a controlled seismic source of energy such as dynamite or Tovex blast a specialized air gun or a seismic vibrator Reflection seismology is similar to sonar and echolocation Seismic reflection data Seismic Reflection OutlinesContents 1 History 2 Summary of the method 2 1 The reflection experiment 2 2 Reflection and transmission at normal incidence 2 3 Reflection and transmission at non normal incidence 2 4 Interpretation of reflections 2 5 Sources of noise 2 5 1 Air wave 2 5 2 Ground roll Rayleigh wave Scholte wave Surface wave 2 5 3 Refraction Head wave Conical wave 2 5 4 Multiple reflection 2 5 5 Cultural noise 2 5 6 Electromagnetic noise 2 6 2D versus 3D 3 Applications 3 1 Hydrocarbon exploration 3 1 1 Seismic data acquisition 3 1 2 Land survey acquisition 3 1 3 Marine survey acquisition Towed Streamer 3 1 4 Marine survey acquisition Ocean Bottom Seismic OBS 3 1 5 Marine survey acquisition Ocean Bottom Nodes OBN 3 1 6 Time lapse acquisition 4D 3 1 7 Seismic data processing 3 1 8 Seismic interpretation 3 1 9 Seismic attribute analysis 3 2 Crustal studies 4 Environmental impact 4 1 Land 4 2 Marine 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Seismic testing in 1940Reflections and refractions of seismic waves at geologic interfaces within the Earth were first observed on recordings of earthquake generated seismic waves The basic model of the Earth s deep interior is based on observations of earthquake generated seismic waves transmitted through the Earth s interior e g Mohorovicic 1910 1 The use of human generated seismic waves to map in detail the geology of the upper few kilometers of the Earth s crust followed shortly thereafter and has developed mainly due to commercial enterprise particularly the petroleum industry Seismic reflection exploration grew out of the seismic refraction exploration method which was used to find oil associated with salt domes 2 Ludger Mintrop a German mine surveyor devised a mechanical seismograph in 1914 that he successfully used to detect salt domes in Germany He applied for a German patent in 1919 that was issued in 1926 In 1921 he founded the company Seismos which was hired to conduct seismic exploration in Texas and Mexico resulting in the first commercial discovery of oil using the refraction seismic method in 1924 3 The 1924 discovery of the Orchard salt dome in Texas led to a boom in seismic refraction exploration along the Gulf Coast but by 1930 the method had led to the discovery of most of the shallow Louann Salt domes and the refraction seismic method faded 2 After WWI those involved in the development of commercial applications of seismic waves included Mintrop Reginald Fessenden John Clarence Karcher E A Eckhardt William P Haseman and Burton McCollum In 1920 Haseman Karcher Eckhardt and McCollum founded the Geological Engineering Company In June 1921 Karcher Haseman I Perrine and W C Kite recorded the first exploration reflection seismograph near Oklahoma City Oklahoma 4 4 10 Early reflection seismology was viewed with skepticism by many in the oil industry An early advocate of the method commented As one who personally tried to introduce the method into general consulting practice the senior writer can definitely recall many times when reflections were not even considered on a par with the divining rod for at least that device had a background of tradition 5 The Geological Engineering Company folded due to a drop in the price of oil In 1925 oil prices had rebounded and Karcher helped to form Geophysical Research Corporation GRC as part of the oil company Amerada In 1930 Karcher left GRC and helped to found Geophysical Service Incorporated GSI GSI was one of the most successful seismic contracting companies for over 50 years and was the parent of an even more successful company Texas Instruments Early GSI employee Henry Salvatori left that company in 1933 to found another major seismic contractor Western Geophysical Many other companies using reflection seismology in hydrocarbon exploration hydrology engineering studies and other applications have been formed since the method was first invented Major service companies in recent years have included CGG ION Geophysical Petroleum Geo Services Polarcus TGS and WesternGeco but since the oil price crash of 2015 providers of seismic services have continued to struggle financially such as Polarcus 6 whilst companies that were seismic acquisition industry leaders just ten years ago such as CGG 7 and WesternGeco 8 have now removed themselves from the seismic acquisition environment entirely and restructured to focus upon their existing seismic data libraries seismic data management and non seismic related oilfield services Summary of the method editSeismic waves are mechanical perturbations that travel in the Earth at a speed governed by the acoustic impedance of the medium in which they are travelling The acoustic or seismic impedance Z is defined by the equation Z v r displaystyle Z v rho nbsp where v is the seismic wave velocity and r Greek rho is the density of the rock When a seismic wave travelling through the Earth encounters an interface between two materials with different acoustic impedances some of the wave energy will reflect off the interface and some will refract through the interface At its most basic the seismic reflection technique consists of generating seismic waves and measuring the time taken for the waves to travel from the source reflect off an interface and be detected by an array of receivers as geophones or hydrophones at the surface 9 Knowing the travel times from the source to various receivers and the velocity of the seismic waves a geophysicist then attempts to reconstruct the pathways of the waves in order to build up an image of the subsurface In common with other geophysical methods reflection seismology may be seen as a type of inverse problem That is given a set of data collected by experimentation and the physical laws that apply to the experiment the experimenter wishes to develop an abstract model of the physical system being studied In the case of reflection seismology the experimental data are recorded seismograms and the desired result is a model of the structure and physical properties of the Earth s crust In common with other types of inverse problems the results obtained from reflection seismology are usually not unique more than one model adequately fits the data and may be sensitive to relatively small errors in data collection processing or analysis 10 For these reasons great care must be taken when interpreting the results of a reflection seismic survey The reflection experiment edit The general principle of seismic reflection is to send elastic waves using an energy source such as dynamite explosion or Vibroseis into the Earth where each layer within the Earth reflects a portion of the wave s energy back and allows the rest to refract through These reflected energy waves are recorded over a predetermined time period called the record length by receivers that detect the motion of the ground in which they are placed On land the typical receiver used is a small portable instrument known as a geophone which converts ground motion into an analogue electrical signal In water hydrophones are used which convert pressure changes into electrical signals Each receiver s response to a single shot is known as a trace and is recorded onto a data storage device then the shot location is moved along and the process is repeated Typically the recorded signals are subjected to significant amounts of signal processing 4 2 3 21 Reflection and transmission at normal incidence edit nbsp P wave reflects off an interface at normal incidenceWhen a seismic P wave encounters a boundary between two materials with different acoustic impedances some of the energy in the wave will be reflected at the boundary while some of the energy will be transmitted through the boundary The amplitude of the reflected wave is predicted by multiplying the amplitude of the incident wave by the seismic reflection coefficient R displaystyle R nbsp determined by the impedance contrast between the two materials 4 For a wave that hits a boundary at normal incidence head on the expression for the reflection coefficient is simply R Z 2 Z 1 Z 2 Z 1 displaystyle R frac Z 2 Z 1 Z 2 Z 1 nbsp where Z 1 displaystyle Z 1 nbsp and Z 2 displaystyle Z 2 nbsp are the impedance of the first and second medium respectively 4 Similarly the amplitude of the incident wave is multiplied by the transmission coefficient T displaystyle T nbsp to predict the amplitude of the wave transmitted through the boundary The formula for the normal incidence transmission coefficient is T 1 R 2 Z 2 Z 2 Z 1 displaystyle T 1 R frac 2Z 2 Z 2 Z 1 nbsp 4 As the sum of the energies of the reflected and transmitted wave has to be equal to the energy of the incident wave it is easy to show that R 2 Z 1 T 2 Z 2 Z 2 Z 2 Z 1 2 4 Z 1 Z 2 2 Z 1 Z 2 Z 1 Z 2 2 1 Z 1 displaystyle frac R 2 Z 1 frac T 2 Z 2 frac Z 2 Z 2 Z 1 2 4Z 1 Z 2 2 Z 1 Z 2 Z 1 Z 2 2 frac 1 Z 1 nbsp By observing changes in the strength of reflections seismologists can infer changes in the seismic impedances In turn they use this information to infer changes in the properties of the rocks at the interface such as density and wave velocity 4 by means of seismic inversion Reflection and transmission at non normal incidence edit nbsp Diagram showing the mode conversions that occur when a P wave reflects off an interface at non normal incidenceThe situation becomes much more complicated in the case of non normal incidence due to mode conversion between P waves and S waves and is described by the Zoeppritz equations In 1919 Karl Zoeppritz derived 4 equations that determine the amplitudes of reflected and refracted waves at a planar interface for an incident P wave as a function of the angle of incidence and six independent elastic parameters 9 These equations have 4 unknowns and can be solved but they do not give an intuitive understanding for how the reflection amplitudes vary with the rock properties involved 11 The reflection and transmission coefficients which govern the amplitude of each reflection vary with angle of incidence and can be used to obtain information about among many other things the fluid content of the rock Practical use of non normal incidence phenomena known as AVO see amplitude versus offset has been facilitated by theoretical work to derive workable approximations to the Zoeppritz equations and by advances in computer processing capacity AVO studies attempt with some success to predict the fluid content oil gas or water of potential reservoirs to lower the risk of drilling unproductive wells and to identify new petroleum reservoirs The 3 term simplification of the Zoeppritz equations that is most commonly used was developed in 1985 and is known as the Shuey equation A further 2 term simplification is known as the Shuey approximation is valid for angles of incidence less than 30 degrees usually the case in seismic surveys and is given below 12 R 8 R 0 G sin 2 8 displaystyle R theta R 0 G sin 2 theta nbsp where R 0 displaystyle R 0 nbsp reflection coefficient at zero offset normal incidence G displaystyle G nbsp AVO gradient describing reflection behaviour at intermediate offsets and 8 displaystyle theta nbsp angle of incidence This equation reduces to that of normal incidence at 8 displaystyle theta nbsp 0 Interpretation of reflections edit The time it takes for a reflection from a particular boundary to arrive at the geophone is called the travel time If the seismic wave velocity in the rock is known then the travel time may be used to estimate the depth to the reflector For a simple vertically traveling wave the travel time t displaystyle t nbsp from the surface to the reflector and back is called the Two Way Time TWT and is given by the formula t 2 d V displaystyle t 2 frac d V nbsp where d displaystyle d nbsp is the depth of the reflector and V displaystyle V nbsp is the wave velocity in the rock 4 81 A series of apparently related reflections on several seismograms is often referred to as a reflection event By correlating reflection events a seismologist can create an estimated cross section of the geologic structure that generated the reflections 4 196 199 Sources of noise edit nbsp Sources of noise on a seismic record Top left air wave top right head wave bottom left surface wave bottom right multiple In addition to reflections off interfaces within the subsurface there are a number of other seismic responses detected by receivers and are either unwanted or unneeded Air wave edit The airwave travels directly from the source to the receiver and is an example of coherent noise It is easily recognizable because it travels at a speed of 330 m s the speed of sound in air Ground roll Rayleigh wave Scholte wave Surface wave edit A Rayleigh wave typically propagates along a free surface of a solid but the elastic constants and density of air are very low compared to those of rocks so the surface of the Earth is approximately a free surface Low velocity low frequency and high amplitude Rayleigh waves are frequently present on a seismic record and can obscure signal degrading overall data quality They are known within the industry as Ground Roll and are an example of coherent noise that can be attenuated with a carefully designed seismic survey 13 The Scholte wave is similar to ground roll but occurs at the sea floor fluid solid interface and it can possibly obscure and mask deep reflections in marine seismic records 14 The velocity of these waves varies with wavelength so they are said to be dispersive and the shape of the wavetrain varies with distance 15 Refraction Head wave Conical wave edit A head wave refracts at an interface travelling along it within the lower medium and produces oscillatory motion parallel to the interface This motion causes a disturbance in the upper medium that is detected on the surface 9 The same phenomenon is utilised in seismic refraction Multiple reflection edit An event on the seismic record that has incurred more than one reflection is called a multiple Multiples can be either short path peg leg or long path depending upon whether they interfere with primary reflections or not 16 17 Multiples from the bottom of a body of water and the air water interface are common in marine seismic data and are suppressed by seismic processing Cultural noise edit Cultural noise includes noise from weather effects planes helicopters electrical pylons and ships in the case of marine surveys all of which can be detected by the receivers Electromagnetic noise edit Particularly important in urban environments i e power lines it is hardly removable Some particular sensor as microelectromechanical systems MEMs are used to decrease these interference when in such environments 18 2D versus 3D edit The original seismic reflection method involved acquisition along a two dimensional vertical profile through the crust now referred to as 2D data This approach worked well with areas of relatively simple geological structure where dips are low However in areas of more complex structure the 2D technique failed to properly image the subsurface due to out of plane reflections and other artefacts Spatial aliasing is also an issue with 2D data due to the lack of resolution between the lines Beginning with initial experiments in the 1960s the seismic technique explored the possibility of full three dimensional acquisition and processing In the late 1970s the first large 3D datasets were acquired and by the 1980s and 1990s this method became widely used 19 20 Applications editReflection seismology is used extensively in a number of fields and its applications can be categorised into three groups 21 each defined by their depth of investigation Near surface applications an application that aims to understand geology at depths of up to approximately 1 km typically used for engineering and environmental surveys as well as coal 22 and mineral exploration 23 A more recently developed application for seismic reflection is for geothermal energy surveys 24 although the depth of investigation can be up to 2 km deep in this case 25 Hydrocarbon exploration used by the hydrocarbon industry to provide a high resolution map of acoustic impedance contrasts at depths of up to 10 km within the subsurface This can be combined with seismic attribute analysis and other exploration geophysics tools and used to help geologists build a geological model of the area of interest Mineral exploration The traditional approach to near surface lt 300 m mineral exploration has been to employ geological mapping geochemical analysis and the use of aerial and ground based potential field methods in particular for greenfield exploration 26 in the recent decades reflection seismic has become a valid method for exploration in hard rock environments Crustal studies investigation into the structure and origin of the Earth s crust through to the Moho discontinuity and beyond at depths of up to 100 km A method similar to reflection seismology which uses electromagnetic instead of elastic waves and has a smaller depth of penetration is known as Ground penetrating radar or GPR Hydrocarbon exploration edit Reflection seismology more commonly referred to as seismic reflection or abbreviated to seismic within the hydrocarbon industry is used by petroleum geologists and geophysicists to map and interpret potential petroleum reservoirs The size and scale of seismic surveys has increased alongside the significant increases in computer power since the late 20th century This led the seismic industry from laboriously and therefore rarely acquiring small 3D surveys in the 1980s to routinely acquiring large scale high resolution 3D surveys The goals and basic principles have remained the same but the methods have slightly changed over the years The primary environments for seismic hydrocarbon exploration are land the transition zone and marine Land The land environment covers almost every type of terrain that exists on Earth each bringing its own logistical problems Examples of this environment are jungle desert arctic tundra forest urban settings mountain regions and savannah Transition Zone TZ The transition zone is considered to be the area where the land meets the sea presenting unique challenges because the water is too shallow for large seismic vessels but too deep for the use of traditional methods of acquisition on land Examples of this environment are river deltas swamps and marshes 27 coral reefs beach tidal areas and the surf zone Transition zone seismic crews will often work on land in the transition zone and in the shallow water marine environment on a single project in order to obtain a complete map of the subsurface nbsp Diagram of equipment used for marine seismic surveysMarine The marine zone is either in shallow water areas water depths of less than 30 to 40 metres would normally be considered shallow water areas for 3D marine seismic operations or in the deep water areas normally associated with the seas and oceans such as the Gulf of Mexico Seismic data acquisition edit Main article Seismic data acquisition Seismic data acquisition is the first of the three distinct stages of seismic exploration the other two being seismic data processing and seismic interpretation 28 Seismic surveys are typically designed by National oil companies and International oil companies who hire service companies such as CGG Petroleum Geo Services and WesternGeco to acquire them Another company is then hired to process the data although this can often be the same company that acquired the survey Finally the finished seismic volume is delivered to the oil company so that it can be geologically interpreted Land survey acquisition edit See also Seismic source nbsp Desert land seismic camp nbsp Receiver line on a desert land crew with recorder truckLand seismic surveys tend to be large entities requiring hundreds of tons of equipment and employing anywhere from a few hundred to a few thousand people deployed over vast areas for many months 29 There are a number of options available for a controlled seismic source in a land survey and particularly common choices are Vibroseis and dynamite Vibroseis is a non impulsive source that is cheap and efficient but requires flat ground to operate on making its use more difficult in undeveloped areas The method comprises one or more heavy all terrain vehicles lowering a steel plate onto the ground which is then vibrated with a specific frequency distribution and amplitude 30 It produces a low energy density allowing it to be used in cities and other built up areas where dynamite would cause significant damage though the large weight attached to a Vibroseis truck can cause its own environmental damage 31 Dynamite is an impulsive source that is regarded as the ideal geophysical source due to it producing an almost perfect impulse function but it has obvious environmental drawbacks For a long time it was the only seismic source available until weight dropping was introduced around 1954 32 allowing geophysicists to make a trade off between image quality and environmental damage Compared to Vibroseis dynamite is also operationally inefficient because each source point needs to be drilled and the dynamite placed in the hole Unlike in marine seismic surveys land geometries are not limited to narrow paths of acquisition meaning that a wide range of offsets and azimuths is usually acquired and the largest challenge is increasing the rate of acquisition The rate of production is obviously controlled by how fast the source Vibroseis in this case can be fired and then move on to the next source location Attempts have been made to use multiple seismic sources at the same time in order to increase survey efficiency and a successful example of this technique is Independent Simultaneous Sweeping ISS 33 A land seismic survey requires substantial logistical support in addition to the day to day seismic operation itself there must also be support for the main camp for resupply activities medical support camp and equipment maintenance tasks security personnel crew changes and waste management Some operations may also operate smaller fly camps that are set up remotely where the distance is too far to travel back to the main camp on a daily basis and these will also need logistical support on a frequent basis Marine survey acquisition Towed Streamer edit nbsp R V Western Legend seismic survey vessel nbsp Marine seismic survey using a towed streamer nbsp Plan view of NATS and MAZ surveys nbsp Plan view of a WATS WAZ survey nbsp Seismic data collected by the USGS in the Gulf of Mexico nbsp Seismic support vessel nbsp Litton 3 km marine streamer nbsp Litton LP gun strings energy source Towed streamer marine seismic surveys are conducted using specialist seismic vessels that tow one or more cables known as streamers just below the surface typically between 5 and 15 metres depending upon the project specification that contain groups of hydrophones or receiver groups along their length see diagram Modern streamer vessels normally tow multiple streamers astern which can be secured to underwater wings commonly known as doors or vanes that allow a number of streamers to be towed out wide to the port and starboard side of a vessel Current streamer towing technology such as seen on the PGS operated Ramform series of vessels built between 2013 and 2017 34 has pushed the number of streamers up to 24 in total on these vessels For vessels of this type of capacity it is not uncommon for a streamer spread across the stern from door to door to be in excess on one nautical mile The precise configuration of the streamers on any project in terms of streamer length streamer separation hydrophone group length and the offset or distance between the source centre and the receivers will be dependent upon the geological area of interest below the sea floor that the client is trying to get data from Streamer vessels also tow high energy sources principally high pressure air gun arrays that operate at 2000psi that fire together to the create a tuned energy pulse into the seabed from which the reflected energy waves are recorded on the streamer receiver groups Gun arrays are tuned that is the frequency response of the resulting air bubble from the array when fired can be changed depending upon the combination and number of guns in a specific array and their individual volumes Guns can be located individual on an array or can be combined to form clusters Typically source arrays have a volume of 2000 cubic inches to 7000 cubic inches but this will depend upon the specific geology of the survey area Marine seismic surveys generate a significant quantity of data 35 due to the size of modern towed streamer vessels and their towing capabilities A seismic vessel with 2 sources and towing a single streamer is known as a Narrow Azimuth Towed Streamer or NAZ or NATS By the early 2000s it was accepted that this type of acquisition was useful for initial exploration but inadequate for development and production 36 in which wells had to be accurately positioned This led to the development of the Multi Azimuth Towed Streamer MAZ which tried to break the limitations of the linear acquisition pattern of a NATS survey by acquiring a combination of NATS surveys at different azimuths see diagram 37 This successfully delivered increased illumination of the subsurface and a better signal to noise ratio The seismic properties of salt poses an additional problem for marine seismic surveys it attenuates seismic waves and its structure contains overhangs that are difficult to image This led to another variation on the NATS survey type the wide azimuth towed streamer or WAZ or WATS and was first tested on the Mad Dog field in 2004 38 This type of survey involved 1 vessel solely towing a set of 8 streamers and 2 separate vessels towing seismic sources that were located at the start and end of the last receiver line see diagram This configuration was tiled 4 times with the receiver vessel moving further away from the source vessels each time and eventually creating the effect of a survey with 4 times the number of streamers The end result was a seismic dataset with a larger range of wider azimuths delivering a breakthrough in seismic imaging 36 These are now the three common types of marine towed streamer seismic surveys Marine survey acquisition Ocean Bottom Seismic OBS edit Marine survey acquisition is not just limited to seismic vessels it is also possible to lay cables of geophones and hydrophones on the sea bed in a similar way to how cables are used in a land seismic survey and use a separate source vessel This method was originally developed out of operational necessity in order to enable seismic surveys to be conducted in areas with obstructions such as production platforms without having the compromise the resultant image quality 39 Ocean bottom cables OBC are also extensively used in other areas that a seismic vessel cannot be used for example in shallow marine water depth lt 300m and transition zone environments and can be deployed by remotely operated underwater vehicles ROVs in deep water when repeatability is valued see 4D below Conventional OBC surveys use dual component receivers combining a pressure sensor hydrophone and a vertical particle velocity sensor vertical geophone but more recent developments have expanded the method to use four component sensors i e a hydrophone and three orthogonal geophones Four component sensors have the advantage of being able to also record shear waves 40 which do not travel through water but can still contain valuable information In addition to the operational advantages OBC also has geophysical advantages over a conventional NATS survey that arise from the increased fold and wider range of azimuths associated with the survey geometry 41 However much like a land survey the wider azimuths and increased fold come at a cost and the ability for large scale OBC surveys is severely limited In 2005 ocean bottom nodes OBN an extension of the OBC method that uses battery powered cableless receivers placed in deep water was first trialled over the Atlantis Oil Field in a partnership between BP and Fairfield Geotechnologies 42 The placement of these nodes can be more flexible than the cables in OBC and they are easier to store and deploy due to their smaller size and lower weight Marine survey acquisition Ocean Bottom Nodes OBN edit nbsp Large node surveys can create a significant requirement for secure and well serviced storage areasThe development of node technology came as a direct development from that of ocean bottom cable technology i e that ability to place a hydrophone in direct contact with the seafloor to eliminate the seafloor to hydrophone sea water space that exists with towed streamer technology The ocean bottom hydrophone concept itself is not new and has been used for many years in scientific research but its rapid use as a data acquisition methodology in oil and gas exploration is relatively recent Nodes are self contained 4 component units which include a hydrophone and three horizontal and vertical axis orientation sensors Their physical dimensions vary depending on the design requirement and the manufacturer but in general nodes tend to weigh in excess of 10 kilograms per unit to counteract buoyancy issues and to lessen the chance of movement on the seabed due to currents or tides Nodes are usable in areas where streamer vessels may not be able to safely enter and so for the safe navigation of node vessels and prior to the deployment of nodes a bathymetry seabed survey is normally conducted of the survey area using side scan technology to map the seabed topography in detail This will identify any possible hazards that could impact the safe navigation of node and source vessels and also to identify any issues for node deployment including subsea obstructions wrecks oilfield infrastructure or sudden changes in water depths from underwater cliffs canyons or other locations where nodes may not be stable or not make a good connection to the seabed Unlike OBC operations a node vessel does not connect to a node line whereas ocean bottom cables need to be physically attached to a recorder vessel to record data in real time With nodes until the nodes are recovered and the data reaped from them reaping is the industry term used to remove data from a recovered node when it is placed within a computerised system that copies the hard drive data from the node there is an assumption that the data will be recorded as there is no real time quality control element to a node s operating status as they are self contained and not connected to any system once they are deployed The technology is now well established and very reliable and once a node and its battery system has passed all of its set up criteria there is a high degree of confidence that a node will work as specified Technical downtime during node projects i e individual node failures during deployment are usually in single figures as a percentage of the total nodes deployed Nodes are powered by either rechargeable internal Lithium ion battery packs or replaceable non rechargeable batteries the design and the specification of the node will determine what battery technology is used The battery life of a node unit is a critical consideration in the design of a node project this is because once the battery runs out on a node the data that has been collected is no longer stored on the solid state hard drive and all data recorded since it was deployed on the sea floor will be lost Therefore a node with a 30 day battery life must be deployed record data be recovered and reaped within that 30 day period This also ties in with the number of nodes that are to be deployed as this is closely related to battery life too If too many nodes are deployed and the OBN crew s resources are not sufficient to recover these in time or external factors such as adverse weather limits recovery operations batteries can expire and data can be lost Disposable or non rechargeable batteries can also create a significant waste management issue as batteries must be transported to and from an operation and the drained batteries disposed of by a licensed contractor ashore Another important consideration is that of synchronising the timing of individual node clock units with an internal clock drift correction Any error in synchronising nodes properly before they are deployed can create unusable data Because node acquisition is often multi directional and from a number of sources simultaneously across a 24 hour time frame for accurate data processing it is vital that all of the nodes are working to the same clock time The node type and specification will determine the node handling system design and the deployment and recovery modes At present there are two mainstream approaches node on a rope and ROV operations Node on a ropeThis method requires the node to be attached to a steel wire or a high specification rope Each node will be evenly spaced along the rope which will have special fittings to securely connect the node to the rope for example every 50 metres depending upon the prospect design This rope is then laid by a specialist node vessel using an node handling system usually with dynamic positioning along a pre defined node line The nodes are landed onto pre plotted positions with an agreed and acceptable error radius for example a node must be placed within a 12 5 metre radius from the navigation pre plot positions They are often accompanied by pingers small transponders that can be detected by an underwater acoustic positioning transducer which allows a pinging vessel or the node vessel itself to establish a definite sea floor position for each node on deployment Depending on the contract pingers can be located on every node or every third node for example Pinging and pinging equipment is the industry shorthand for the use of USBL or Ultra short baseline acoustic positioning systems which are interfaced with vessel based differential GPS or Differential Global Positioning System navigation equipment Node lines are usually recovered by anchor or grapple hook dragging to recover the node line back on board the vessel Handling systems on node vessels are used to store deploy and recover nodes and their specific design will depend upon the node design Small nodes can include a manual handling element whereas larger nodes are automatically handled by robotic systems for moving storing recharging and reaping nodes Node vessels also use systems such as spoolers to manage rope lines and rope bins to store the many kilometres of ropes often carried onboard node on a rope vessels Node on a rope is normally used where there is shallow water within the prospect for example less than 100 metres or a transition zone area close to a beach For deeper water operations a dynamic positioning vessel is used to ensure accurate deployment of nodes but these larger vessels have a limitation as to how far into shore they can safely navigate into the usual cutoff will be between 15 and 20 metres water depth depending on the vessel and its in water equipment Specialist shallow water boats can then be used for deploying and recovering nodes in water depths as shallow as 1 to 3 metres These shallow water nodes can then be used to tie in with geophones on the shore to provide a consistent seismic line transition from water to land There are some issues with this approach which make them vulnerable to damage or loss on a project and these all must be risk assessed and mitigated Since nodes connected together on a rope sit on the sea floor unattended they can be moved due to strong currents the ropes can snag on seabed obstructions they can be dragged by third party vessel anchors and caught by trawling fishing vessels The threat of these types of potential hazards to this equipment should normally be identified and assessed during the project planning phase especially in oilfield locations where well heads pipelines and other subsea structures exist and where any contact with these must be avoided normally achieved by adopting exclusion zones Since it is possible for node lines to be moved after deployment the issue of node position on recovery is critical and therefore positioning during both deployment and recovery is a standard navigation quality control check In some case node lines may need to be recovered and re laid if the nodes have moved outside of the contract specifications ROV deploymentThis method utilises ROV remotely operated underwater vehicle technology to handle and place nodes at their pre plotted positions This type of deployment and recovery method uses a basket full of nodes which is lowered into the water An ROV will connect with the compatible node basket and remove individual nodes from a tray in a pre defined order Each node will be placed on its allocated pre plot position On recovery the process works in reverse the node to be recovered is picked up by the ROV placed into the node basket tray until the basket is full when it is lifted back to the surface The basket is recovered onto the node vessel the nodes are removed from the basket and reaped ROV operations are normally used for deep water node projects often in water depths to 3000 metres in the open ocean However there are some issues with ROV operations that need to be considered ROV operations tend to be complex especially deep water ROV operations and so the periodic maintenance demands may impact upon production Umbilical s and other high technology spares for ROV s can be extremely expensive and repairs to ROVs which require onshore or third party specialist support will stop a node project Due to extreme water depths the node deployment and recovery production rate will be much lower due to the time for node basket transit from surface to seafloor and there will almost certainly be weather or sea condition limitation for ROV operations in open ocean areas The logistics for supporting operations far from shore can also be problematic for regular resupply bunkering and crew change activities Time lapse acquisition 4D edit Time lapse or 4D surveys are 3D seismic surveys repeated after a period of time the 4D term refers to the fourth dimension which in this case is time Time lapse surveys are acquired in order to observe reservoir changes during production and identify areas where there are barriers to flow that may not be detectable in conventional seismic Time lapse surveys consist of a baseline survey and a monitor or repeat survey acquired after the field has been in production Most of these surveys have been repeated NATS surveys as they are cheaper to acquire and most fields historically already had a NATS baseline survey Some of these surveys are collected using ocean bottom cables because the cables can be accurately placed in their previous location after being removed Better repetition of the exact source and receiver location leads to improved repeatability and better signal to noise ratios A number of 4D surveys have also been set up over fields in which ocean bottom cables have been purchased and permanently deployed This method can be known as life of field seismic LoFS or permanent reservoir monitoring PRM 36 4D seismic surveys using towed streamer technology can be very challenging as the aim of a 4D survey it to repeat the original or baseline survey as accurately as possible Weather tides current and even the time of year can have a significant impact upon how accurately such a survey can achieve that repeatability goal OBN has proven to be another very good way to accurately repeat a seismic acquisition The world s first 4D survey using nodes was acquired over the Atlantis Oil Field in 2009 with the nodes being placed by a ROV in a water depth of 1300 2200 metres to within a few metres of where they were previously placed in 2005 43 Seismic data processing edit See also Deconvolution Seismic migration and Multidimensional seismic data processing There are three main processes in seismic data processing deconvolution common midpoint CMP stacking and migration 44 Deconvolution is a process that tries to extract the reflectivity series of the Earth under the assumption that a seismic trace is just the reflectivity series of the Earth convolved with distorting filters 45 This process improves temporal resolution by collapsing the seismic wavelet but it is nonunique unless further information is available such as well logs or further assumptions are made Deconvolution operations can be cascaded with each individual deconvolution designed to remove a particular type of distortion CMP stacking is a robust process that uses the fact that a particular location in the subsurface will have been sampled numerous times and at different offsets This allows a geophysicist to construct a group of traces with a range of offsets that all sample the same subsurface location known as a Common Midpoint Gather 46 The average amplitude is then calculated along a time sample resulting in significantly lowering the random noise but also losing all valuable information about the relationship between seismic amplitude and offset Less significant processes that are applied shortly before the CMP stack are Normal moveout correction and statics correction Unlike marine seismic data land seismic data has to be corrected for the elevation differences between the shot and receiver locations This correction is in the form of a vertical time shift to a flat datum and is known as a statics correction but will need further correcting later in the processing sequence because the velocity of the near surface is not accurately known This further correction is known as a residual statics correction Seismic migration is the process by which seismic events are geometrically re located in either space or time to the location the event occurred in the subsurface rather than the location that it was recorded at the surface thereby creating a more accurate image of the subsurface Seismic interpretation edit See also Geologic modelling nbsp The goal of seismic interpretation is to obtain a coherent geological story from the map of processed seismic reflections 47 At its most simple level seismic interpretation involves tracing and correlating along continuous reflectors throughout the 2D or 3D dataset and using these as the basis for the geological interpretation The aim of this is to produce structural maps that reflect the spatial variation in depth of certain geological layers Using these maps hydrocarbon traps can be identified and models of the subsurface can be created that allow volume calculations to be made However a seismic dataset rarely gives a picture clear enough to do this This is mainly because of the vertical and horizontal seismic resolution 48 but often noise and processing difficulties also result in a lower quality picture Due to this there is always a degree of uncertainty in a seismic interpretation and a particular dataset could have more than one solution that fits the data In such a case more data will be needed to constrain the solution for example in the form of further seismic acquisition borehole logging or gravity and magnetic survey data Similarly to the mentality of a seismic processor a seismic interpreter is generally encouraged to be optimistic in order encourage further work rather than the abandonment of the survey area 49 Seismic interpretation is completed by both geologists and geophysicists with most seismic interpreters having an understanding of both fields In hydrocarbon exploration the features that the interpreter is particularly trying to delineate are the parts that make up a petroleum reservoir the source rock the reservoir rock the seal and trap Seismic attribute analysis edit See also Seismic attribute Seismic attribute analysis involves extracting or deriving a quantity from seismic data that can be analysed in order to enhance information that might be more subtle in a traditional seismic image leading to a better geological or geophysical interpretation of the data 50 Examples of attributes that can be analysed include mean amplitude which can lead to the delineation of bright spots and dim spots coherency and amplitude versus offset Attributes that can show the presence of hydrocarbons are called direct hydrocarbon indicators Crustal studies edit The use of reflection seismology in studies of tectonics and the Earth s crust was pioneered in the 1970s by groups such as the Consortium for Continental Reflection Profiling COCORP who inspired deep seismic exploration in other countries such as BIRPS in Great Britain and ECORS in France 51 The British Institutions Reflection Profiling Syndicate BIRPS was started up as a result of oil hydrocarbon exploration in the North Sea It became clear that there was a lack of understanding of the tectonic processes that had formed the geological structures and sedimentary basins which were being explored The effort produced some significant results and showed that it is possible to profile features such as thrust faults that penetrate through the crust to the upper mantle with marine seismic surveys 52 Environmental impact editAs with all human activities seismic reflection surveys have some impact on the Earth s natural environment and both the hydrocarbon industry and environmental groups partake in research to investigate these effects Land edit On land conducting a seismic survey may require the building of roads for transporting equipment and personnel and vegetation may need to be cleared for the deployment of equipment If the survey is in a relatively undeveloped area significant habitat disturbance may occur and many governments require seismic companies to follow strict rules regarding destruction of the environment for example the use of dynamite as a seismic source may be disallowed Seismic processing techniques allow for seismic lines to deviate around natural obstacles or use pre existing non straight tracks and trails With careful planning this can greatly reduce the environmental impact of a land seismic survey The more recent use of inertial navigation instruments for land survey instead of theodolites decreased the impact of seismic by allowing the winding of survey lines between trees The potential impact of any seismic survey on land needs to be assessed at the planning stage and managed effectively Well regulated environments would generally require Environmental and Social Impact Assessment ESIA or Environmental Impact Assessment EIA reports prior to any work starting Project planning also needs to recognise that once a project has completed what impact if any will be left behind It is the contractors and clients responsibility to manage the remediation plan as per the contract and as per the laws where the project has been conducted Depending upon the size of a project land seismic operations can have a significant local impact and a sizeable physical footprint especially where storage facilities camp utilities waste management facilities including black and grey water management general and seismic vehicle parking areas workshops and maintenance facilities and living accommodation are required Contact with local people can cause potential disruptions to their normal lives such as increased noise 24 hour operations and increased traffic and these have to be assessed and mitigated Archeological considerations are also important and project planning must accommodate legal cultural and social requirements that will have to be considered Specialist techniques can be used to assessed safe working distances from buildings and archeological structures to minimise their impact and prevent damage Marine edit The main environmental concern for marine seismic surveys is the potential for noise associated with the high energy seismic source to disturb or injure animal life especially cetaceans such as whales porpoises and dolphins as these mammals use sound as their primary method of communication with one another 53 High level and long duration sound can cause physical damage such as hearing loss whereas lower level noise can cause temporary threshold shifts in hearing obscuring sounds that are vital to marine life or behavioural disturbance 54 A study has shown 55 that migrating humpback whales will leave a minimum 3 km gap between themselves and an operating seismic vessel with resting humpback whale pods with cows exhibiting increased sensitivity and leaving an increased gap of 7 12 km Conversely the study found that male humpback whales were attracted to a single operating airgun as they were believed to have confused the low frequency sound with that of whale breaching behaviour In addition to whales sea turtles fish and squid all showed alarm and avoidance behaviour in the presence of an approaching seismic source It is difficult to compare reports on the effects of seismic survey noise on marine life because methods and units are often inadequately documented The gray whale will avoid its regular migratory and feeding grounds by gt 30 km in areas of seismic testing citation needed Similarly the breathing of gray whales was shown to be more rapid indicating discomfort and panic in the whale It is circumstantial evidence such as this that has led researchers to believe that avoidance and panic might be responsible for increased whale beachings although research is ongoing into these questions Even so airguns are shut down only when cetaceans are seen at very close range usually under 1 km 56 Offering another point of view a joint paper from the International Association of Geophysical Contractors IAGC and the International Association of Oil and Gas Producers IOGP argue that the noise created by marine seismic surveys is comparable to natural sources of seismic noise stating 57 The UK government organisation the Joint Nature Conservation Committee more commonly known as JNCC is the public body that advises the UK Government and devolved administrations on UK wide and international nature conservation 58 has had a long term vested interest in the impact of geophysical or seismic surveys on the marine environment for many years Even back in the 1990s it was understood at a government level that the impact of the sound energy produced by seismic surveys needed to be investigated and monitored 59 JNCC guidelines have been and continue to be one of the references used internationally as a possible baseline standard for surveys in seismic contracts world wide such as the JNCC guidelines for minimising the risk of injury to marine mammals from geophysical surveys seismic survey guidelines 2017 60 A complicating factor in the discussion of seismic sound energy as a disruptive factor to marine mammals is that of the size and scale of seismic surveys as they are conducted into the 21st century Historically seismic surveys tended to have a duration of weeks or months and to be localised but with OBN technology surveys can cover thousands of square kilometres of ocean and can continue for years all of the time putting sound energy into the ocean 24 hours a day from multiple energy sources One current example of this is the 85 000 square kilometre mega seismic survey contract 61 signed by the Abu Dhabi national oil company ADNOC in 2018 with an estimated duration into 2024 across a range of deep water areas coastal areas islands and shallow water locations It may be very difficult to assess the long term impact of these huge operations on marine life In 2017 IOGP recommended 62 that to avoid disturbance whilst surveying Protective measures are employed to address site specific environmental conditions of each operation to ensure that sound exposure and vessel traffic do not harm marine mammals Surveys planned to avoid known sensitive areas and time periods such as breeding and feeding areas Exclusion zones are typically established around the seismic source to further protect marine fauna from any potentially detrimental effects of sound The exclusion zone is typically a circle with a radius of at least 500 meters around the sound source Trained observers and listening devices are used to visually and acoustically monitor that zone for marine mammals and other protected species before any sound producing operations begin These observers help ensure adherence to the protective practices during operations and their detailed reports provide information on the biodiversity of the survey area to the local governments Sound production typically begins with a soft start or ramp up that involves a gradual increase of the sound level from the air gun source from a very low level to full operational levels at the beginning of the seismic lines usually over 20 to 40 minutes This soft start procedure is intended to allow time for any animal that may be close to the sound source to move away as the sound grows louder As second factor is the regulatory environment where the seismic survey is taking place In highly regulated locations such as the North Sea or the Gulf of Mexico the legal requirements will be clearly stated at the contract level and both contractor and client will comply with the regulations as the consequences of non compliance can be severe such as substantial fines or withdrawal of permits for exploration blocks However there are some countries which have a varied and rich marine biome but where the environmental laws are weak and where a regulator is ineffective or even non existent This situation where the regulatory framework is not robust can severely compromise any attempts at protecting marine environments this is frequently found where state owned oil and gas companies are dominant in a country and where the regulator is also a state owned and operated entity and therefore it is not considered to be truly independent See also editDeconvolution Depth conversion the conversion of acoustic waves two way travel time to actual depth Exploration geophysics LIGO One way wave equation Passive seismic SEG Y a popular file format for seismic reflection data Seismic migration Seismic refraction Seismic Unix open source software for processing of seismic reflection data Seismic wave Swell filter Synthetic seismogramReferences edit Grubisic Vanda Orlic Mirko 2007 Early Observations of Rotor Clouds by Andrija Mohorovicic PDF Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 88 5 693 700 Bibcode 2007BAMS 88 693G doi 10 1175 BAMS 88 5 693 a b Telford W M et al 1976 Applied Geophysics Cambridge University Press p 220 Sheriff R E Geldart L P 1995 Exploration Seismology 2nd ed Cambridge University Press pp 3 6 a b c d e f g h Sheriff R E Geldart L P 1982 Exploration seismology Volume 1 History theory and data acquisition Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 67 ISBN 0521243734 Rosaire E E Adler Joseph H January 1934 Applications and limitations of the dip method Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists 18 1 121 Polarcus Appointment of Joint Provisional Liquidators CGG Delivering Geoscience Leadership WesternGeco a b c Sheriff R E Geldart L P 1995 2nd Edition Exploration Seismology Cambridge University Press Bube Kenneth P Burridge Robert 1 October 1983 The One Dimensional Inverse Problem of Reflection Seismology SIAM Review 25 4 497 559 doi 10 1137 1025122 ISSN 0036 1445 Shuey R T 1985 A simplification of the Zoeppritz equations Geophysics 50 4 609 614 Bibcode 1985Geop 50 609S doi 10 1190 1 1441936 Avseth P T Mukerji and G Mavko 2005 Quantitative seismic interpretation Cambridge University Press Cambridge p 183 Ground Roll Schlumberger Oilfield Glossary Archived from the original on 31 May 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Zheng Yingcai Fang Xinding Liu Jing Fehler Michael C 2013 Scholte waves generated by seafloor topography arXiv 1306 4383 physics geo ph Dobrin M B 1951 Dispersion in seismic surface waves Geophysics 16 63 80 Multiples Reflection Schlumberger Oifield Glossary Archived from the original on 2 June 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Pendrel J 2006 Seismic Inversion A Critical Tool in Reservoir Characterization Scandinavian Oil Gas Magazine 5 6 19 22 Malehmir Alireza Zhang Fengjiao Dehghannejad Mahdieh Lundberg Emil Dose Christin Friberg Olof Brodic Bojan Place Joachim Svensson Mats Moller Henrik 1 November 2015 Planning of urban underground infrastructure using a broadband seismic landstreamer Tomography results and uncertainty quantifications from a case study in southwestern Sweden Geophysics 80 6 B177 B192 Bibcode 2015Geop 80B 177M doi 10 1190 geo2015 0052 1 ISSN 0016 8033 Galbraith M 2001 3D Seismic Surveys Past Present and Future CSEG Recorder Canadian Society of Exploration Geophysicists 26 6 Cartwright J Huuse M 2005 3D seismic technology the geological Hubble Basin Research 17 1 1 20 Bibcode 2005BasR 17 1C doi 10 1111 j 1365 2117 2005 00252 x S2CID 129218651 Yilmaz Oz 2001 Seismic data analysis Society of Exploration Geophysicists p 1 ISBN 1 56080 094 1 Gochioco Lawrence M 1990 Seismic surveys for coal exploration and mine planning The Leading Edge 9 4 25 28 Bibcode 1990LeaEd 9 25G doi 10 1190 1 1439738 Milkereit B Eaton D Salisbury M Adam E Bohlen Thomas 2003 3D Seismic Imaging for Mineral Exploration PDF Commission on Controlled Source Seismology Deep Seismic Methods Retrieved 8 September 2013 The Role of Geophysics In Geothermal Exploration Quantec Geoscience Archived from the original on 5 February 2013 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Louie John N Pullammanappallil S K 2011 Advanced seismic imaging for geothermal development PDF New Zealand Geothermal Workshop 2011 Proceedings Archived from the original PDF on 12 July 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Dentith Michael Mudge Stephen T 24 April 2014 Geophysics for the Mineral Exploration Geoscientist Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 cbo9781139024358 ISBN 9780521809511 S2CID 127775731 Transition Zone Geokinetics Retrieved 8 September 2013 Yilmaz Oz 2001 Seismic data analysis processing inversion and interpretation of seismic data 2nd ed Society of Exploration Geophysicists ISBN 978 1 56080 094 1 Jon Cocker 2011 Land 3 D Seismic Survey Designed To Meet New Objectives E amp P Hart Energy Archived from the original on 19 February 2013 Retrieved 12 March 2012 s Gluyas J Swarbrick R 2004 Petroleum Geoscience Blackwell Publishing p 22 ISBN 978 0 632 03767 4 E Sheriff Robert Geldart L P 1995 Exploration Seismology 2nd ed Cambridge University Press pp 209 210 ISBN 0 521 46826 4 E Sheriff Robert Geldart L P 1995 Exploration Seismology 2nd ed Cambridge University Press p 200 ISBN 0 521 46826 4 Howe Dave Foster Mark Allen Tony Taylor Brian Jack Ian 2008 Independent simultaneous sweeping a method to increase the productivity of land seismic crews SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts 2008 pp 2826 2830 doi 10 1190 1 3063932 PGS fleet Seismic vessels 19 November 2015 E Sheriff Robert Geldart L P 1995 Exploration Seismology 2nd ed Cambridge University Press p 260 ISBN 0 521 46826 4 a b c Barley Brian Summers Tim 2007 Multi azimuth and wide azimuth seismic Shallow to deep water exploration to production The Leading Edge 26 4 450 458 Bibcode 2007LeaEd 26 450B doi 10 1190 1 2723209 Howard Mike 2007 Marine seismic surveys with enhanced azimuth coverage Lessons in survey design and acquisition PDF The Leading Edge 26 4 480 493 Bibcode 2007LeaEd 26 480H doi 10 1190 1 2723212 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Threadgold Ian M Zembeck England Kristin Aas Per Gunnar Fontana Philip M Hite Damian Boone William E 2006 Implementing a wide azimuth towed streamer field trial The what why and mostly how of WATS in Southern Green Canyon SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts 2006 pp 2901 2904 doi 10 1190 1 2370129 Ocean Bottom Cable Schlumberger Oifield Glossary Archived from the original on 28 July 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Four Component Seismic Data Schlumberger Oilfield Glossary Archived from the original on 16 July 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Stewart Jonathan Shatilo Andrew Jing Charlie Rape Tommie Duren Richard Lewallen Kyle Szurek Gary 2004 A comparison of streamer and OBC seismic data at Beryl Alpha field UK North Sea SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts 2004 pp 841 844 doi 10 1190 1 1845303 Beaudoin Gerard 2010 Imaging the invisible BP s path to OBS nodes SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts 2010 Society of Exploration Geophysicists pp 3734 3739 doi 10 1190 1 3513626 Reasnor Micah Beaudoin Gerald Pfister Michael Ahmed Imtiaz Davis Stan Roberts Mark Howie John Openshaw Graham Longo Andrew 2010 Atlantis time lapse ocean bottom node survey A project team s journey from acquisition through processing SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts 2010 Society of Exploration Geophysicists pp 4155 4159 doi 10 1190 1 3513730 Yilmaz Oz 2001 Seismic data analysis Society of Exploration Geophysicists p 4 ISBN 1 56080 094 1 E Sheriff Robert Geldart L P 1995 Exploration Seismology 2nd ed Cambridge University Press p 292 ISBN 0 521 46826 4 Common midpoint Schlumberger Oifield Glossary Archived from the original on 31 May 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Gluyas J Swarbrick R 2004 Petroleum Geoscience Blackwell Publishing p 24 ISBN 978 0 632 03767 4 Basics of Seismic Interpretation E Sheriff Robert Geldart L P 1995 Exploration Seismology 2nd ed Cambridge University Press p 349 ISBN 0 521 46826 4 Petrel Seismic Attribute Analysis Schlumberger Archived from the original on 29 July 2013 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Consortium for Continental Reflection Profiling Retrieved 6 March 2012 Crustal Architecture and Images BIRPS Retrieved 6 March 2012 Richardson W John et al 1995 Marine Mammals and Noise Academic Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 12 588441 9 Gausland Ingebret 2000 Impact of seismic surveys on marine life PDF The Leading Edge 19 8 903 905 Bibcode 2000LeaEd 19 903G doi 10 1190 1 1438746 Archived from the original PDF on 28 May 2013 Retrieved 8 March 2012 McCauley R D et al 2000 Marine seismic surveys A study of environmental implications PDF The APPEA Journal 40 692 708 doi 10 1071 AJ99048 hdl 20 500 11937 80308 Archived from the original PDF on 28 May 2013 Retrieved 8 March 2012 Cummings Jim January 2004 Sonic Impact a Precautionary Assessment of Noise Pollution From Ocean Seismic Surveys Greenpeace 45 Pp Retrieved 16 November 2021 Scientific Surveys and Marine Mammals Joint OGP IAGC Position Paper December 2008 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 12 September 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Who we are JNCC Adviser to Government on Nature Conservation Cetacean observations during seismic surveys in 1996 JNCC guidelines for minimising the risk of injury to marine mammals from geophysical surveys Seismic survey guidelines JNCC Resource Hub ADNOC Awards 519m Contract for World s Largest 3D Seismic Survey 26 November 2020 Recommended monitoring and mitigation measures for cetaceans during marine seismic survey geophysical operations IOGP 2017 Further reading editThe following books cover important topics in reflection seismology Most require some knowledge of mathematics geology and or physics at the university level or above Brown Alistair R 2004 Interpretation of three dimensional seismic data sixth ed Society of Exploration Geophysicists and American Association of Petroleum Geologists ISBN 0 89181 364 0 Biondi B 2006 3d Seismic Imaging Three Dimensional Seismic Imaging Society of Exploration Geophysicists ISBN 0 07 011117 0 Claerbout Jon F 1976 Fundamentals of geophysical data processing McGraw Hill ISBN 1 56080 137 9 Ikelle Luc T amp Lasse Amundsen 2005 Introduction to Petroleum Seismology Society of Exploration Geophysicists ISBN 1 56080 129 8 Scales John 1997 Theory of seismic imaging Golden Colorado Samizdat Press Archived from the original on 18 August 2015 Yilmaz Oz 2001 Seismic data analysis Society of Exploration Geophysicists ISBN 1 56080 094 1 Milsom J University College of London 2005 Field Geophysics Wiley Publications ISBN 978 0 470 84347 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Chapman C H 2004 Fundamentals of Seismic Wave Propagation Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 81538 3 Further research in reflection seismology may be found particularly in books and journals of the Society of Exploration Geophysicists the American Geophysical Union and the European Association of Geoscientists and Engineers External links editBiography of Henry Salvatori Proving That The Seismic Reflection Method Really Works Geophysical Society of Tulsa Reflection Seismology Literature at Stanford Exploration Project Website of the International Association of Geophysical Contractors IAGC IOGP position paper on seismic surveys and marine mammals PDF Tutorial on seismic reflection data processing Information about using Seismic Survey in oil and gas exploration in Australia Archived 13 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reflection seismology amp oldid 1187006754 Seismic data processing, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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