Toward the autojuggie: Planting 72 geophones in 2 seconds

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Issue Date
1999-04-15Author
Steeples, Don W.
Baker, Gregory S.
Schmeissner, Chris M.
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Shallow seismic reflection surveys require dense spatial wave-field sampling, contributing to their high cost. To assess the feasibility of planting geophones automatically, we planted 72 geophones in approximately 2 s in a test line, using an 11-m-wide farm tillage tool as a planting device. Geophones were attached rigidly, at 15 cm intervals, to five pieces of heavy-duty channel iron bolted to the tillage-tool frame. Conventional comparison-line data collected about 75 cm away, parallel to the test line, were visually comparable with the seismic source 12 m distant. When the sources were placed 1 m from the geophones, a surface-wave mode was excited by the channel iron and detected by geophones in both lines. This mode exhibited a different phase velocity than that of the desired seismic body-waves and could be attenuated by frequency-wavenumber filtering. These results suggest that automatic geophone placement is feasible and could decrease shallow seismic surveying costs.
Description
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from “http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com”.
ISSN
0094-8276Collections
- Geology Scholarly Works [245]
Citation
Steeples, D., Baker, G., & Schmeissner, C. (1999). Toward the autojuggie: Planting 72 geophones in 2 seconds. Geophysical Research Letters, 26(8), 1085-1088, http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1029/1999GL900191
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