Resampling 2D Lines Into Grid 5061777 02
Resampling 2D Lines Into Grid 5061777 02
Resampling 2D Lines Into Grid 5061777 02
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You will be prompted to generate a seismic layout polygon. For 2D lines you have a choice to generate
this polygon based on every nth trace. Choose for every trace (1) if you want to create an exact layout
and want to generate a point set where the lateral sampling rate is as dense as the seismic. If this is not
necessary, you may choose to decimate this polygon by required factor depending on the 3D grid lateral
resolution which the point set is going to be upscaled in. By decimating the polygon you save processing
time however you need to be careful and make sure you are creating a point set which still going to give
you the most information possible depending on the resolution of your grid.
Press OK and you will see a polyline generated called Seismic line layout slb1 where slb1=line name.
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In my case the trace extent is 8000. In the same dialog window you can determine what you sample
interval was (in my case 4). This means is I want to preserve the sample rate I will need to have 2000
loops (delta trace/sample rate = loops).
The seismic sampling rate was chosen for demonstration purposes. Alternatively I could have chosen to
decimate my sample rate based on what I need or ultimately matched it to the 3D grid resolution. The
resolution and extents of the grid can similarly be check from the Statistics tab in the settings for the grid.
The advantage of decimating the resolution to at least match the grid is the workflow will generally run
substantially faster. This will generally be a user choice based on hardware capabilities but it is generally
recommended to create a point set at grid resolution.
The first part of the workflow will generate a Temp folder where you generate all the copies of you 2D
lines layout and set them to a particular Z values, depending on desired resolution of point set. Inputs
here are the seismic line layout, the loop number, the sample rate and the top depth.
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The second part of the workflow will take all these generated polygons in the Temp folder and append
them, then move them to the Final folder. We will remove the Temp folder at the end of the workflow
for clean up purposes as it isnt necessary to QC or view the results, but if desired this line in the
workflow can be disabled.
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This will result in the first entry you see under your Final folder, an appended polyline at desired
resolution.
The blue plane below is actually a series of lines generated based on the seismic layout.
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This will generate the point set in the Final folder, with an attribute called slb1. You can see the
point set below, and as we sampled to the seismic resolution the extent and values preserved are the
same as the original 2D line.
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Below we can see the point set (annotated spheres) have been given a value depending on the
amplitude of seismic line slb1, which is displayed behind the points with no interpolation so each
pixel can be seen definitively.
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Then choose to upscale the point attribute you created, making sure to select the seismic attribute.
This will result in a seismic property in your 3D grid for that line. This general workflow can be repeated
for many 2D lines, with a property generated for each line. This can then be combined as desired into
one property. However it is important to remember to balance/scale any different vintages of 2D lines if
you want to compare the amplitude values in the one property. In addition lines must be mistied prior to
the workflow, and for intersecting lines a choice must be made on which values to keep for the
intersecting cells when you are merging the properties (hopefully a thorough mistie workflow will minimize
difference on intersection lines in area of interest).
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