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All EAGE book titles are available in the Epub format. For reading Epub there are all kinds of e-readers available. See this link for Windows or this link for Mac for good advice on what e-reader to choose.
Please be aware that EAGE no longer sells print book copies and that e-books cannot be returned to the EAGE Bookshop.
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- European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers [2] http://purl.org/dc/terms/isPartOf http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/eage
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From Seismic Interpretation to Modelling and Assessment of Oil and Gas Fields
Language: EnglishPublication Date: January 2010More LessIn this publication the author pays special attention to the cross-disciplinary problems of the geosciences: seismic processing and interpretation, geological and hydrodynamic modelling and he analyses the contradictions of the applied methods. The author states that narrow specialization in geosciences has hindered unbiased subsurface investigation. There is a need for new specialists who are able to integrate knowledge from the different fields.
The book provides critical but unbiased analysis of the interpretation possibilities of seismic exploration when forecasting rock properties. Moreover, compared to the Russian version, this edition gives a more extended analysis of seismic inversion algorithms. This book will be useful for geologists, geophysicists, engineers involved in the development of hydrocarbon fields and other, cross-disciplinary specialists.
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Full Waveform Inversion in an Anisotropic World (EET 10)
Language: EnglishPublication Date: January 2016More LessWhy full waveform inversion? Is not imaging (at a very reduced cost) enough? Well, a simple visual characterization depicting the difference between what the two approaches bring to the table can be realized using the common street artist pencil and brush. While imaging provides us with what we could describe as a pencil sketch of the Earth’s content, outline its complications, FWI fills in the colours, with a more in depth description and clarity to the Earth’s picture. While a pencil sketch may, depending on the pencil (or the frequency), provide a map of the major elements in the drawings, FWI provides colours, usually with definite crisp borders between the colours, reflecting the high resolution nature of the technique.
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