Anatomy of Flat Spots
By J.C. Wan
Seismic
flat spots are caused by the interface
between two different types of fluids
in a reservoir. They are recognizable
when the reservoirs are more than twice
the seismic tuning thickness and relatively
soft. This phenomenon is frequently used
as a direct hydrocarbon indicator (DHI)
in conjunction with seismic amplitudes
and AVO techniques in exploring for hydrocarbons.
Flat-spot recognition has been particularly
successful in the North Sea where it
has been applied to both exploration
and reservoir monitoring (e.g., the Gannet-C
Field). Sometimes, however, seismic reflections
caused by other phenomena, such as remnant
multiples and lithology variations, have
been misinterpreted as fluid contacts
simply because they look flat seismically
and show up in the downdip location,
leading to drilling of unsuccessful prospects.
To help understand the characteristics
of flat spots and reduce the risk of
misidentifying fluid contacts, some theoretical
analyses and synthetic seismograms are
presented that will help characterize
a genuine flat spot. The primary findings
of this study are that flat spots: (1)
are rarely flat in time; (2) are always
positive in amplitude; (3) always show
increasing amplitudes with offset; and
(4) always show tuning effects at the
extremities of the fluid wedge. Synthetic
seismograms and case studies from a variety
of basins will be shown to help shed
light on essential flat spot characteristics.
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