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Steam zone diffractions

Three sets of large amplitude diffractions are visible in the stacked sections of Figure 6, labeled ``D1-D3''. The D2 diffraction appears to have the strongest amplitude. Its location at 200 ms depth corresponds almost exactly with base of the upper steam zone in the P formation (Figure 2). The D1 and D3 diffractions are weaker than the D1 diffraction, and correspond to the top of the P formation (165 ms) and base of the K steam zone (240 ms) respectively. These diffractions are probably due to the concentrated zones of steam, as will be demonstrated in the seismic modeling and interpretation section of this paper.


previous up next print clean
Next: Polarity changes and vanishing Up: IMAGES OF FLUID FLOW Previous: Steam leak
Stanford Exploration Project
11/12/1997