Abstract

Seismic texture analysis is a useful tool for delineating subsurface geologic features from 3D seismic surveys, and the gray-level co-occurrence matrix (GLCM) method has been popularly applied for seismic texture discrimination since its first introduction in the 1990s. The GLCM texture analysis consists of two components: (1) to rescale seismic amplitude by a user-defined number of gray levels and (2) to perform statistical analysis on the spatial arrangement of gray levels within an analysis window. Traditionally, the linear transformation is simply used for amplitude rescaling so that the original reflection patterns could be best preserved. However, the seismic features of interpretational interest often cover only a small portion of its amplitude histogram. For representing such features more effectively, it is helpful to perform a nonlinear rescaling of the amplitude distribution between different seismic features. To achieve such an objective, this study proposes a nonlinear GLCM analysis based on four types of nonlinear gray-level transformation (logarithmic, exponential, sigmoid, and logit) and investigates their implications for seismic facies interpretation. Applications to the 3D seismic data set from offshore Angola (West Africa) demonstrate the added values of the generated nonlinear GLCM attributes in better characterizing the channels, fans, and lobes in a deep-marine turbidite system.

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