Authors / CoAuthors
Jones, L.E.A. | Fomin, T. | Drummond, B.J.
Abstract
In hard rock regions, a large range of stacking velocities is required to correctly stack reflectors of different dips. Typically, horizontal reflectors stack at 6000 m/s, whereas reflectors with dips of 60 degrees stack at 12,000 m/s. For high fold (vibrator) data, correct stack of conflicting dips can be achieved by dip moveout (DMO) correction. However, for lower fold (dynamite) data, the sparse offset distribution complicates application of DMO. An alternative technique involves producing stacks with different stacking velocities and stacking these stacks. This technique was applied to two seismic reflection data sets, low fold dynamite from Broken Hill and high fold vibrator data from the Lachlan Fold Belt. The Lachlan data set was used as both full 60/120 fold and reduced 10/20 fold. Velocity analysis, both analytical and empirical, was carried out to determine the range of stacking velocities. Stacking velocity increases with dip angle (cos-1 theta), but the velocity range across which an event stacks coherently increases more rapidly (approximately cos-3 theta for velocities typical of hard rock)). The most critical area for analysis is the first two seconds of data, due to greater sensitivity of NMO to stacking velocity. The optimum number of stacks is an important consideration, based on the number of stacks in which an event contributes coherently to the sum The Broken Hill stack data showed simultaneous imaging of horizontal and dipping events. For the Lachlan reduced fold data set, horizontal and moderate to steeply dipping events were stacked successfully, although not as well as the post-DMO stack of the full fold data. The technique has some problems at the shallowest levels, where the stack can be degraded due to time shifts of events in the individual stacks.
Product Type
nonGeographicDataset
eCat Id
41616
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Cnr Jerrabomberra Ave and Hindmarsh Dr GPO Box 378
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Keywords
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- External PublicationAbstract
- ( Theme )
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- seismic sections
- ( Theme )
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- seismology
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- AU-NSW
- Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC)
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- Earth Sciences
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- Published_Internal
Publication Date
2003-01-01T00:00:00
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geoscientificInformation
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Unknown
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Extents
[-35.0, -30.0, 140.0, 149.0]
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