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Seismic Interpretation — Fundamentals

 

Seismic Interpretation — Fundamentals

Author: Your Name Published: April 2026 Category: Seismic Data Management → Interpretation

Introduction

Seismic interpretation is the art and science of extracting geological meaning from seismic data. It transforms seismic reflections into an understanding of the subsurface — mapping faults, horizons, stratigraphy, and reservoir architecture. Interpretation sits at the center of exploration and development, guiding drilling decisions and reducing geological uncertainty.

This article explains the fundamentals of seismic interpretation, the workflows involved, and the skills required to interpret seismic data effectively.

1. What Is Seismic Interpretation?

Seismic interpretation is the process of analyzing seismic data to identify:

  • Structural features (faults, folds, salt bodies)

  • Stratigraphic features (channels, pinchouts, unconformities)

  • Reservoir geometry

  • Lithology and fluid indicators

  • Basin evolution

Interpretation integrates seismic data with:

  • Well logs

  • Geological models

  • Core data

  • Production history

  • Attributes and inversion

The goal is to build a coherent geological model that explains the seismic response.

2. The Interpretation Workflow

A. Data Familiarization

Interpreters begin by understanding:

  • Survey coverage

  • Processing history

  • Data quality

  • Key horizons and structural trends

This sets the foundation for accurate interpretation.

B. Horizon Interpretation

Horizon picking involves:

  • Identifying continuous reflectors

  • Tracking them across the volume

  • Handling faults and discontinuities

  • Building structural frameworks

Horizon interpretation defines stratigraphy and reservoir boundaries.

C. Fault Interpretation

Faults are interpreted using:

  • Vertical sections

  • Time slices

  • Coherence and curvature attributes

  • Fault‑probability volumes (AI‑assisted)

Fault interpretation is essential for structural mapping and reservoir compartmentalization.

D. Attribute Analysis

Attributes highlight:

  • Faults

  • Fractures

  • Channels

  • Lithology changes

Attributes guide interpreters toward subtle geological features.

E. Integration with Well Data

Well logs provide:

  • Lithology

  • Porosity

  • Fluid contacts

  • Checkshot ties

This ensures seismic interpretations are grounded in physical measurements.

F. Building the Geological Model

The final model includes:

  • Structural framework

  • Stratigraphic architecture

  • Reservoir geometry

  • Facies distribution

This model supports reservoir characterization and development planning.

3. Tools and Technologies in Interpretation

  • 3D visualization

  • Seismic attributes

  • Inversion

  • Machine learning

  • Physics‑guided AI

  • Automated horizon and fault extraction

Modern interpretation blends human expertise with advanced technology.

4. Challenges in Interpretation

  • Noise and multiples

  • Poor data quality

  • Complex geology

  • Velocity uncertainty

  • Interpreter bias

QC and cross‑disciplinary collaboration help mitigate these challenges.

Conclusion

Seismic interpretation is a critical skill in geoscience. By combining seismic data, attributes, well logs, and geological knowledge, interpreters build accurate subsurface models that guide exploration and development decisions.

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