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Role of multiple reflections in the formationof wave field in the cretaceous successions of the Middli Kura depression in Azerbaijan
Author(s) -
T. R. Akhmedov,
T. Kh. Niyazov
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
geofizičeskij žurnal/geofizičeskij žurnal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2524-1052
pISSN - 0203-3100
DOI - 10.24028/gzh.v43i3.236384
Subject(s) - cretaceous , mesozoic , geology , horizon , trough (economics) , paleontology , field (mathematics) , seismology , geometry , structural basin , mathematics , pure mathematics , economics , macroeconomics
The article is devoted to the elucidation of the nature of the wave field recorded below the supporting-dominant seismic horizon «P» in the Middle Kura depression of Azerbaijan. A brief overview of the work carried out here is given; it is indicated that some geologists and geophysicists of our country, in our opinion, mistakenly assume that the observed wave field below the specified horizon is formed mainly by multiple reflections. Since the introduction of the common depth point method into the practice of seismic exploration, individual areas of the Middle Kura depression in Azerbaijan, including the Yevlakh-Agjabedi trough, have been repeatedly studied with varying degrees of frequency tracking. On the basis of this, a fairly large number of promising structures have been identified and mapped. But the structure of the Mesozoic, in particular the deposits of the Upper Cretaceous, still remains insufficiently studied. The study of the geological structure of the Mesozoic sediments, which are considered promising in terms of oil and gas content, is an urgent geological task; exploration work was carried out in the studied areas of the Middle Kura depression using a complex of geophysical methods at the modern technical and methodological level and new results were obtained. The constructed seismic sections show a dynamically pronounced and well-traceable seismic horizon corresponding to the Mesozoic surface and located deeper than it, relatively weak, short, discontinuous reflective boundaries that characterize the structure within the Mesozoic deposits. The studies carried out on the basis of modeling and velocity analysis made it possible to prove that the wave field in the time interval corresponding to the Mesozoic deposits owes its origin to intermittent single reflections from volcanic-carbonate deposits of the Upper Cretaceous age.

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