Abstract

Seismic horizons play a significant role in reservoir model construction and sedimentary facies interpretation, providing crucial low-frequency constraints for seismic inversion. In basin and regional interpretations, the assumption that seismic reflections represent a stratigraphic surface with constant geologic time is significant for guiding seismic interpretation. This assumption may fail when applied to local reservoir scales due to common geologic time transgressions of a particular event in regular wavelet frequency. There will be inconsistencies between seismic events and stratigraphic surfaces. To address this issue and obtain relatively accurate stratal interpretations, we develop a hybrid horizon extraction method honoring seismic structures and time-stratigraphic frameworks, in which seismic reflection structures provide local details and interpreted geologic time surfaces offer critical constraints. First, we develop concepts and a workflow using a realistic outcrop model. We develop a new geology-guided structure tensor by fitting a gradient vector of seismic images and geologic time surfaces. We also consider existing geologic conditions, such as unconformities, and fuse them into our method to calculate accurate slopes and generate reliable relative geologic time images at a fine scale, followed by making slices. Further, we extend our method to 3D seismic data volumes. Our experiments, conducted using simulated and field data, show the superiority and accuracy of our hybrid method compared with the slope-based and stratal slicing methods. These results highlight the potential for applying our method to fine-scale subsurface modeling.

Full Text
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