Stephen, R. A.; Harding, A. J. (1983): Travel time analysis of borehole seismic data. American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States, Journal of Geophysical Research, 88 (B10), 8289-8298, georefid:1984-009481

Abstract:
Method for reducing travel-time data from multiple offset borehole seismic experiments to velocity-depth structure. Linear inversion. For a borehole receiver the velocity at the depth of the receiver can be obtained from the slope of the inflection point of the travel-time curve. Thus a direct measure of the uppermost velocity of a section can be obtained from the travel-time data of a shallow borehole receiver. The technique is applied to data from three borehole seismic experiments in oceanic crust: western Atlantic (crustal age approximately 110 m.y.), the Gulf of California (crustal age approximately 1 m.y.) and the Costa Rica Rift area (crustal age approximately 6 m.y.). All three experiments show relatively high upper crustal velocities (>4.0 km/s), suggesting that layer 2A is not present even in the very young crust. All sites had over 100 m of sediment thickness, and it is postulated that sediment thickness and sediment permeability, not merely age, govern the velocity of the upper crust by accelerating the cementation of fractures and cracks.--Modified journal abstract.
Coverage:
West: -115.0000 East: -106.0000 North: 32.0000 South: 22.4500
West: NaN East: NaN North: NaN South: NaN
Supplemental Information:
Woods Hole Oceanogr. Inst.; Contrib. No. 5332
Data access:
Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=1984-009481 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
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