Excellent discussion. I was a seismic data processor from 1973 to 2007. Experienced in dynamite, vibroseis, and airgun. I worked in various processing centers in the US, Australia, and Great Britain. I also worked quality control on both land and offshore seismic crews at various times. Your discussion is very good to inform the general public as to "what in the hell is all that noise and what are all of those wiggles?". Please keep it up!
Great video. I worked on land seismic crews in the seventies (surveying). I saw a lot of unprocessed sections in the field but only vaguely understood what I was looking at. Of course a lot this was done by hand back then and the technology has increased exponentially. (Incidentally I worked on what I was told was the first ever 3D seismic project ever. It was near Ardmore OK circa 1975. )
Im a beginner at this topic , but can you suggest me softwares that are actually useful and demanded regarding this geophysical interpretation abd processing! Thank you
@@SanaCheckmate In my line, Schlumberger's Petrel is the most commonly-used platform - generously made available through academic licensing for research and teaching purposes. There is a vast user-community globally and some good training materials online if you google....
Really good treatment of this topic. I'm going to share this video with my Geophysics class right now! Thanks for sharing this.
Thanks Matty - glad you found it useful. Hope your students enjoy it too!
Excellent discussion. I was a seismic data processor from 1973 to 2007. Experienced in dynamite, vibroseis, and airgun. I worked in various processing centers in the US, Australia, and Great Britain. I also worked quality control on both land and offshore seismic crews at various times. Your discussion is very good to inform the general public as to "what in the hell is all that noise and what are all of those wiggles?". Please keep it up!
Thank you very much!
you saved my life!
I was struggling so hard to understand how to read a seismogram!
Thank you for your content
Glad the film was useful!
me too.
Great video. I worked on land seismic crews in the seventies (surveying). I saw a lot of unprocessed sections in the field but only vaguely understood what I was looking at. Of course a lot this was done by hand back then and the technology has increased exponentially. (Incidentally I worked on what I was told was the first ever 3D seismic project ever. It was near Ardmore OK circa 1975. )
Excellent explanation and demonstration. Thanks very much.
Thanks - glad it was useful.
what a beautiful clear voice and explanation! i wish i found this earlier as i've been struggling to let these little things click with me for weeks!!
Amazing! Really good👌
This lecture is very informative, thank you.
incredible explanation!
Thank You so much for this!!. This is very helpful!
Thank you soooo much for this video ❤❤❤❤
thanks a lot sir ! for sharing very help lecture.
god bless you you have saved my life
Thanks!
simplifies the process of seismic operations
to make it accessible to more people....
Im a beginner at this topic , but can you suggest me softwares that are actually useful and demanded regarding this geophysical interpretation abd processing! Thank you
This is pretty specialised stuff - there are several "industry standard" options available - such as Geovation and Vista....
@@robbutler2095 do you suggest that as a beginner I try to use and improve myself at petrel and landmarks?
@@SanaCheckmate In my line, Schlumberger's Petrel is the most commonly-used platform - generously made available through academic licensing for research and teaching purposes. There is a vast user-community globally and some good training materials online if you google....
godsend