1887
ASEG2007 - 19th Geophysical Conference
  • ISSN: 2202-0586
  • E-ISSN:

Abstract

Summary

Since their introduction by Nigel Anstey and Tury Taner in the1970’s, attributes have become an integral tool in the interpreter’s arsenal. At present, as emphasised by Taner, no direct relationships have been established between all attributes and physical and geological characteristics of the subsurface. Their discriminatory properties, however, allow very useful classifications to be performed. This paper deals with various attribute related issues. Firstly, we consider the theoretical and physical aspects concerning instantaneous attributes, particularly instantaneous phase. This attribute is of central importance since it describes the location of events in the seismic trace and leads to the computation of other instantaneous quantities. Secondly, we deal with the issue of information content. It has often been implied that attributes convey no more information than that present in the original seismic trace from which they are derived. This, however, is akin to claiming that David contains no more information than the raw marble from which Michelangelo freed him. A seismic attribute section provides that much more information. The attribute in time attempts to enhance resolution, whereas the attribute property in the spatial dimension emphasises continuity. These important and interesting issues will be dealt with theoretically and by example.

Finally, we present and illustrate by means of a real data examples, a novel, hybrid attribute which has been constructed to provide high resolution information. We must point out that, as is always the case, our attribute is dependent on the phase of the source wavelet.

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2007-12-01
2026-01-19
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References

  1. Barnes, A. (2006). Too many seismic attributes? CSEG Recorder March, 41--45.
  2. Cohen, L. (1993). Instantaneous 'anything'. Proc. Acoust. Speech, Signal Process. 4.
  3. Fomel, S. (2007). Local seismic attributes. Geophysics 72, A29--A33.
  4. Gretton, A., R. Herbrich, A. Smola, O. Busquet, and B. Scholkopf (2005). Kernel methods for measuring independence. J. Machine Learning Research 6, 205--2129.
  5. Taner, M. T. (2001). Seismic attributes. CSEG Recorder September, 49--56.
  6. Tolstoy, I. (1973). Wave propagation. Int. Series Earth and Planet. Sci., McGraw Hill.
  7. Ulrych, T. J. and M. D. Sacchi (2005). Information based Inversion and Processing with Applications. Handbook of Geophysical Exploration. Seismic Exploration, Elsevier.
  8. Zhang, C. and T. J. Ulrych (2002). Estimation of quality factors from CMP records. Geophysics 67 (1), 1542--1547.
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  • Article Type: Research Article
Keyword(s): Instantaneous attributes; time/frequency Least action.
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