Understanding Seismic Anisotropy in Exploration and Exploitation: Hands On 

By: Leon Thomsen



Instructor

Dr Leon Thomsen
(Delta Geophysics, Houston, TX, United States)

Duration

9–12 November 2020:
4:00PM-8:00PM CET
4 hours/day

Disciplines

Geophysics – Seismic Processing

Level

Advanced

Language

English

EurGeol

8 CPD points



Keywords

AVO DEPTH CONVERSION FRACTURES IMAGING MULTICOMPONENT P-WAVE RECIPROCITY PORE PRESSURE RESERVOIR CHARACTERIZATION ROCK PHYSICS WIDE AZIMUTH S-WAVE


Course format

The EAGE Interactive online short courses bring carefully selected courses of experienced instructors from industry and academia online to give participants the possibility to follow the latest education in geoscience and engineering remotely. The courses are designed to be easily digested over the course of two or three days. Participants will have the possibility to interact live with the instructor and ask questions. 

Course description

This course covers all areas of applied seismic anisotropy, with class exercises and ample time for full discussion. Because anisotropy is such a fundamental concept, it covers topics in seismic acquisition, processing, imaging and interpretation, all based on seismic rock physics.



Course objectives

This is not a "methods course" but rather a "concept course", familiarizing the students with essential concepts, enabling them to ask the right questions in future conversations, rather than to operate particular software packages.



Course outline

The following steps in seismic data processing will be discussed:

  1. Physical principles
  2. P-waves: imaging
  3. P-waves: characterization
  4. S-waves
  5. C-waves
  6. Epilogue


Participants' profile

Geophysicists should attend who have a working knowledge of conventional exploration geophysics and wonder how it can be that we use isotropic concepts to acquire and analyze data that come from rocks that, after only brief thoughtful consideration, must clearly be anisotropic. 



Recommended reading

Before attending the course participants are recommended to read the following paper:

  • Thomsen, L., Weak Elastic Anisotropy,Geophysics, 51(10), 1954-1966,1986.
  • Thomsen, L., 2014. Seismic Anisotropy in Exploration and Exploitation, the SEG/EAGE Distinguished Instructor Short Course #5 Lecture Notes, 2nd Edition, Soc. Expl. Geoph., Tulsa.



About the instructor

Leon Thomsen

Leon Thomsen holds titles of Chief Scientist at Delta Geophysics, Research Professor at the University of Houston, and Visiting Scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. He holds a B.S. in geophysics from California Institute of Technology (Pasadena), and a Ph.D. in geophysics from Columbia University (New York). He held postdoctoral positions at Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifique (Paris), International Business Machines (Palo Alto), and Caltech. He was Assistant, then Associate Professor at the State University of New York (Binghamton), with sabbatical positions at Goddard Institute for Space Studies (New York) and the Australian National University (Canberra).  

Leon"s industrial career began in 1980, at Amoco"s famous research center in Tulsa, where he was the Amoco inventor of what we now call seismic AVO. He led significant revisions to the exploration seismic paradigm, helping to establish the basic ideas of polar anisotropy and azimuthal anisotropy. His 1986 paper, establishing the modern field of seismic anisotropy, is the single-most-cited paper in the history of Geophysics; a Google search of the term "Thomsen parameter" returns over 300,000 hits. In 1995, he moved to Amoco"s Worldwide Exploration Group in Houston, where his 1997 paper established the modern field of converted-wave exploration, defining such concepts as fC-wavesf, fregistrationf, fgamma effectivef, fdiodic velocityf, etc. In 2008, Leon retired from BP, and established the consultancy Delta Geophysics (cf.deltageophysics.net). 

Leon has served the Society of Exploration Geophysics as Distinguished Lecturer, Vice-President, President (2006-07), and Chairman of the Board of SEAM. He served as SEG/EAGE DISC Instructor in 2002. He holds the SEG"s Fessenden Award, and the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences" Kapitsa Medal. He is an Honorary Member of the Geophysical Society of Houston, and of the EAGE, and is a Foreign Member of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences.




EAGE supports its members and the Geoscience community in general by offering a 35% discount on the regular prices for our Interactive online short courses during these difficult times.

$195

EAGE Member price

$275

Non-Member price

*Non-member price for this product does not include EAGE membership.



Cancellation and Changes Policy

Registration fees will be refunded as follows:
  • Cancellation received before 26 October 2020: Refund will be processed after the event had ended. Amount will minus an administration fee of $35 per person.
  • Cancellation received on or after 26 October 2020: No refund will be made. 
  • Transferring of your registration to another participant will cost $35, as administration fee, plus any differences in delegate types, where applicable (for instance when changing a registration from a member to a non-member). 
  • For an overview of all EAGE Registration Terms and Conditions please click here to download.