Geophones on a board
Author(s) -
Don W. Steeples,
Gregory S. Baker,
C. Schmeissner,
Brian K. Macy
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
geophysics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.178
H-Index - 172
eISSN - 1942-2156
pISSN - 0016-8033
DOI - 10.1190/1.1444591
Subject(s) - geophone , reflection (computer programming) , geology , seismology , reflector (photography) , acoustics , remote sensing , computer science , optics , physics , programming language , light source
We examined the feasibility of using seismic reflections to image the upper 10 m of the earth’s surface quickly and effectively by rigidly attaching geophones to a wooden board at 5-cm intervals. The shallow seismic reflection information obtained was equivalent to control‐test data gathered using classic, single‐geophone plants with identical 5-cm intervals. Tests were conducted using both a .22-caliber rifle source and a 30.06-rifle source. In both cases, the results were unexpected: in response to our use of small, high‐resolution seismic sources at offsets of a few meters, we found little intergeophone interference that could be attributed to the presence of the board. Furthermore, we noted very little difference in a 60-ms intra‐alluvial reflection obtained using standard geophone plants versus that obtained using board‐mounted geophones. For both sources, amplitude spectra were nearly identical for data gathered with and without the board. With the 30.06 source, filtering at high‐frequency passbands...
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