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Australian Energy Producers Journal Australian Energy Producers Journal Society
Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

FLATTENED TIME SLICES—A STRATIGRAPHIC APPROACH TO 3D SEISMIC INTERPRETATION ON THE NORTH WEST SHELF OF AUSTRALIA

K. Martens

The APPEA Journal 43(1) 255 - 271
Published: 2003

Abstract

Conventional time slices are a powerful method of integrating horizon picks and fault picks into a unified interpretation and are a handy way of viewing structures, especially in faulted areas. The limitation is that time slices are seldom useful in viewing the morphology of a horizon. A 3D cube is the present day structural volume; it retains any structure imparted on the geology after deposition. When a time slice is defined, the structural dip limits the area of the integral depositional elements that can be imaged. For example, a depositional surface developed as part of a fluvial-deltaic system is seldom one event and it cannot be easily identified and picked in a vertical section. Flattened time slices take out the regional dip and allow a complete depositional surface to be viewed.

The North West Shelf of Australia and especially the Barrow Sub-basin is a particularly suitable place to apply this exploration technique. The entire sedimentary package, laid down in a variety of depositional environments, has been tilted to the northwest by an average of 3°. This strong post-depositional tilt limits the uses of conventional time slices to imaging only the diprelated features of an area. Whereas conventional time slices only make apparent the dip of the section, flattened time slices can reveal subtle and intricate stratigraphic architecture.

This paper describes the seismic features of a number of depositional systems from the Barrow Sub-basin and outlines how complex channel systems can be determined by the use of the flattened time slice approach. Given the importance of stratigraphic plays in the Barrow Subbasin, the technique outlined in this paper is considered to be an important exploration tool.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ02013

© CSIRO 2003

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