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Effect of flood basalt stratigraphy on the phase of seismic waveforms recorded offshore Faroe Islands


Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Schuler, J 
Christie, PAF 
White, RS 

Abstract

jats:p The generation of short-period multiples between highly heterogeneous layers of basalt flows can strongly alter transmitted seismic wavefields. These layers filter and modify penetrating waves, producing apparent attenuation and phase changes in the observed waveforms. We investigated the waveform and apparent phase changes of the primary seismic signal using mainly the maximum kurtosis approach. We compared the seismic recordings from two short-offset vertical seismic profiles (VSPs) with synthetic seismograms, generated from sonic logs in the same wells, and we found that short-period multiples cause a rapid broadening of the primary arrivals and strong apparent phase changes within a short depth interval below the top of the basalt flows. Relatively large uncertainties were associated with estimating constant phase shifts of the seismic arrivals within the topmost 250 m of the basalt sequences, where complex scattering occurred. Within this interval of the Brugdan I well, a phase-only compensation of the first arrivals with a frequency-independent, combined scattering, and intrinsic attenuation operator was unfeasible. At a greater depth, we found that the phase shifts, predicted by a VSP-derived effective [Formula: see text] value, were similar to those estimated from the VSP signals using the kurtosis method. Thus, phase-only compensation with a combined scattering and intrinsic attenuation operator could work well depending on the seismic signal bandwidth and the distribution, depth, and magnitude of the impedance contrasts in the basalt sequence. </jats:p>

Description

Keywords

37 Earth Sciences, 3706 Geophysics

Journal Title

Geophysics

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0016-8033
1942-2156

Volume Title

80

Publisher

Society of Exploration Geophysicists
Sponsorship
Natural Environment Research Council (NE/H025006/1)
We wish to thank Shell UK Ltd. and BP for providing the data sets and for the permission to publish them. The views expressed herein, however, are those of the authors, who are solely responsible for any errors. We thank J. Neep and two anonymous reviewers for critically reading the manuscript. Thanks go to A/S Norske Shell, Schlumberger Gould Research, and the Natural Environment Research Council (grant no. NE/H025006/1) for financial support. St. Edmund’s College and the Cambridge Philosophical Society further supported the first author during field work.