Examples of interpreted seismic profiles. Click on the images above to view an enlarged version. Note: The above images are taken from Cross and others, 1998. |
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The interpretation of features mapped using a seismic data set is based on acoustic impedance differences of subsurface material. A towed seismic source emits acoustic energy at regular intervals. The transmitted acoustic energy is reflected from boundaries between mediums of different acoustic impedances (e.g. the water-sediment interface). The interface between different materials is displayed graphically in a seismic record, based on the time it takes the transmitted acoustic energy to travel from the source to each interface and back to the receiver, termed two-way travel time. If the speed of sound within the material is known, depth to each interface can be calculated.
Graphical depiction of two-way travel time. Two-way travel time is the amount of time required to travel the outgoing and returning acoustic pathways, shown in purple in the figure above. |
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The Sea-floor Mapping Group at the USGS Woods Hole Science Center interprets high-resolution seismic data to delineate the shallow geologic framework of a survey area. Processing, interpretation, and analysis of the seismic stratigraphy are performed within a suite of programs designed for this task. The Landmark SeisWorks interpretation software enables the visualization, interpretation, and to some extent the modeling of a large quantity of data within a study area. Stratigraphic data and surface models are displayed within a GIS and can be integrated with other data types, such as sidescan-sonar and sediment samples. |
SeisWorks
SeisVision
This Windows-based seismic interpretation package has the seismic interpretation functionality of SeisWorks, but a more limited capability in terms of tools available for geologic analyses and applications.
In the screen shot displayed below, there are three nested images: the track chart of seismic lines on the left; on the right there are two images atop one another, the seismic line undergoing interpretation is on the bottom and a display of additional physical property information, in this case resistivity, is displayed on the top right, to additionally aid interpretation of the seismic data.
WHSC utilizes these seismic interpretation software systems in the field, in the lab, and at professional meetings/conferences/workshops. The flexibility inherent in such a setup allows for multiple users to access and manage the projects and databases, rather than be limited to a single user on a devoted system.
References
Cross, V., Twichell, D., Parolski, K., and Harrison, S. 1998. Archive of boomer seismic-reflection data collected aboard RV Corliss cruise CRLS97007 off Northern Oregon and Southern Washington inner continental shelf: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 98-351.
Foster D.S., Swift B.A., and Schwab W.C. 1999. Stratigraphic Framework Maps of the Nearshore Area of Southern Long Island from Fire Island to Montauk Point, New York: U.S. Geological Survey Open File Report 99-559.