Seismic waves

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Seismic waves are emitted by vibroseis trucks (aka vibrator or thumper trucks). These vehicles are specially equipped with an impact device, a large, metal, earth-vibrating foot, that generates ground waves. This process is sometimes referred to as geo-thumping.

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Impact device
Courtesy of Peter Comly, - Clodhopper Farm


The trucks are driven down rural highways in areas where gas is suspected, and have electronic equipment on board to record the returns when sound waves bounce back from underground features.

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Convoy of four Dawson vibroseis trucks
sending seismic shock waves down through the road.

Courtesy of Peter Comly, Clodhopper Farm

Usually, the survey area is carefully staked and marked with colored flags serving as measurement markers. Yellow and black fiber optic cables run beneath the markers, connected to vibration sensor units spaced at intervals along the cables. Readings from the sensors help map out the boundaries of the underground rock formations.

Reports often state that the noise and vibrations from vibroseis trucks can be heard for a considerable distance. The trucks work in groups of three or four, one right behind the other, and the impacts they generate are synchronized.

A second way to generate seismic waves involves detonating small explosive charges in the ground.

The basic idea with either method of generating waves is to use the data collected to build a representational model of geological limits of the gas deposit.

Information from seismic studies has occasionally been used for leverage in land negotiations between gas companies and landowners.

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