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    View3D Guide

    Introduction to View3D .................................................................................................................. 1Starting Hampson-Russell Software ............................................................................................... 2

    Starting View3D ......................................................................................................................... 4

    A Brief Summary of the View3D Process .................................................................................. 8Loading the Seismic and Horizon Data .......................................................................................... 8

    Selection Errors ......................................................................................................................... 12

    Scaling the Plot ......................................................................................................................... 14Arranging the View ................................................................................................................... 14

    Zooming .................................................................................................................................... 15Saving the Viewing Parameters ................................................................................................ 17

    Stopping This Tutorial .............................................................................................................. 18

    Adding Slices ................................................................................................................................ 18Displaying Attribute Values .......................................................................................................... 20

    Changing Color Keys For Color Plots .......................................................................................... 21

    Showing Traces and Color Plots Together ............................................................................... 24Special Zoom Views ................................................................................................................. 25

    Birds' Eye View .................................................................................................................... 26

    Magnifying Glass Zoom ....................................................................................................... 26

    Fences and Probes ..................................................................................................................... 28Making Fences ...................................................................................................................... 29

    Probes .................................................................................................................................... 30

    Showing Well Log Data ................................................................................................................ 34Selecting Which Wells to View ............................................................................................ 37

    Emphasizing Value Ranges and Setting Transparency: Visual Control ....................................... 39

    Removing Data From View3D ..................................................................................................... 44

    Loading Data Slices as Horizons .................................................................................................. 45

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    View3D 1

    September 2008

    GUIDE TO VIEW3D

    Introduct ion to View3D

    View3D is a program used to view wellbore paths, well data, seismic data and attribute data as athree dimensional volume. The general objective is to better visualize, illustrate and spatiallyanalyze the data from HRS programs. This tutorial takes you through the most important options

    and features of View3D.

    The data set for this tutorial consists of:

    •  A SEG-Y file, seismic.vol, which is a 3D post-stack data set.

    •  An attribute volume, scaled_porosity.vol, which is a 3D post-stack data set.

    •  7 wells. Each well contains a sonic log (p wave), density log, porosity log and a check-shot file.

    •  A horizon file, Target_hrz.

    •  Two data slices: seismic target  and scaled porosity, positioned at the same place as thehorizon file.

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    2 View3D

    September 2008

    Starting Hampson-Russell Software

    The first step is to start the Geoview program. Geoview is the application manager that acts as a

    launch pad for other Hampson-Russell programs. If you are unfamiliar with the use of Geoview,

     please refer to the Guide to GEOVIEW and eLOG documentation.

    On a Unix workstation, go to a command window and type:

    Geoview   

    On a PC, click the Start  button and select the Geoview option on the Programs / HRSapplications menu.

    When you first launch Geoview, the first window that you see is the Opened Database List,

    which displays your recently used databases. A database is identified by the extension wdb.

    For this tutorial, a database has already been created for you. To load this database for the first  

    time, click Open to bring up the Directory Chooser .

    Click the View3D folder of the HRS/data directory to bring up a list of databases in that folder.Click the View3D.wdb item in the Available List  and click OK.

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    The Geoview Well Explorer  window appears, showing the seven wells within this database. For

    more on this window, see the Installation Geoview and eLOG Guide or the Geoview online help.For now, click the X at the top right to close the window.

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    4 View3D

    September 2008

    Starting View3D

     Now that the database has been opened in Geoview, we are ready to start the View3D program.To do this, click the View3D  button on the Geoview  window.

    The following window now appears:

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     Note that you cannot start a new project in View3D.

    The program is intended as an add-on to other HRS programs, and not as a stand-alone program.

    Therefore, you would need to open a project first created in another HRS program. You can useView3D to view any project created through these and other HRS programs.

    Fortunately, we have provided a project for this tutorial.

    Check the Open Existing Project button and click OK to bring up the Directory Chooser.Click the View3DE_Guide folder in the View3D directory to show projects in the Available List.

    Click the View3D_sand.prj project in the Available Lis t and click OK.

    If a message appears telling you that the pathway to the project has changed, select Switch.

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    6 View3D

    September 2008

    The View3D window now appear:

    This window is used to select what data to load and unload data from the display. It will appearlike this:

     Note that nothing is selected for loading.

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    The Project Loaded column shows the available data in the selected project. If data were

    missing from this list, you need to return to the original HRS program that created the projectand then load that data through that program. Then save that program. Then you would return to

    View3D to display the complete data set. You can instead display seismic parameters or well

    data parameters by clicking the appropriate button in the column.

    The View3D Display section displays the selected data. Because no data has been selected and

     plotted yet, the Display Window is black.

    The Seismic Display Options section is also displayed by default and lets you select how the

    seismic data is displayed: as slices, volumes or slabs.

    The Toolbar lets you load data into the Display Panel, reload data from the database and createand control slices displaying the volume.

    Other sections can be brought up through the Menu, as shown below:

    All of these panels can be hidden by clicking the button at the upper left of the panel.

    The Well Filter  Panel lets you filter the list of wells.

    The Volume Selection Panel lets you select different sources for the displayed traces, the

    displayed horizon and the color plotting, as well as setting its color. The toolbar for that panellets you display wiggles or unload the seismic (remove it from the display).

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    8 View3D

    September 2008

     A Brief Summary of the View3D Process

    •  In the left side of the Data window, select the data to be plotted and drag it into the display panel.

    •  In the right side of that window, set details for displaying.

    •  Zoom the Display window to show the desired area.•  Select the Display mode for the Display window and select what planes to show.

    •  Set the horizon, well and seismic display parameters as needed.

    •  Adjust the view as needed, creating new slices as required.

    The geological play this tutorial handles is the same handled in the EMERGE tutorial and guide.

    It is a channel sand with porosity that can be predicted from seismic data.

    Loading the Seismic and Horizon Data

    On the Data window, find the seismic section seismic.vol and click and drag it into the Display

    Panel.

    By default, the outline of the entire volume and wellbore lengths are shown, but the plot wouldhave extended up to 2 milliseconds and be tall and awkward to view. Therefore, we will change

    the parameters before displaying the seismic data. When the program asks whether to view the

    seismic parameters, select Yes to show the seismic parameters in the Data Management column.

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    Double-click the Domain Start field to move the value to the left. Change that value to 800 to

    shorten the seismic display. We do this so that the plot will not extend above 800 millisecondsTWT. Click Plot.

    This becomes the default, or "Home" size of plot for the data, and you can return to this view by

     pressing the Home key on the vertical toolbar.

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    10 View3D

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    Select Project Data again to show the Project Loaded list.

    Find the horizon Target_hrz in the Project Loaded section. Click and drag it into the Display

    Panel. It will now be plotted in that panel.

    Then go to the Wells section, press the Shift button and select the top and bottom wells. All the

    wells in between will also be selected. Drag these wells into the Display Panel.

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     Now select the Selected Well bar to display that table. It shows what logs have been selected forloading. We are missing the porosity logs. Therefore select that checkbox and reselect the

    Project Data bar.

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    12 View3D

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    A message appears, asking whether to reload the data. Select Yes.

    Selection Errors 

    If you load an incorrect data item, select Seismic Volume>Data Selection from the View menu

    to display that panel at the top of the window.

    The data will be displayed as you drop it into the Display window.

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    Scaling the Plot

    Your horizon may not appear exactly as shown above, and this is because the scaling may be

    different. If the Time axis scale (Z) is too exaggerated, the horizon may look unreasonable. If

    your Z scaling is too small, the horizon may look featureless.

    From the View menu, select Advanced>3D Scale to bring up the Scaling window. Ensure that

    these values are entered:

    X=1Y=1

    Z=0.22

    If not, then correct the values and click OK. If they are correct, then click Close.

    If your plot disappears, then click the Home button on the left toolbar. Your plot will

    reappear with the correct scale.

     Arranging the View

     Note also that the zone of interest, the part with the horizon, is dwarfed by the spread of data.

    The actual color choices for the well data, seismic and horizon will depend on what was last usedin the program. We will show how to change them later.

    The entire volume is displayed with south facing upwards, contrary to what we would normally

    expect, and we should keep that in mind. Reselect Show North Arrow from theView>Advanced menu to hide that arrow.

    The slices shows the porosity values that we have loaded as an attribute. They also partially

    obscure the horizon, the wells and well top information (hence the clipped well top labels, whichare easier to see on the screen than on a gray-scale diagram). To move the X slice (it extends

    lower left to upper right), click the slice with the left mouse button to select it. The slice now has

    a red border with the edges of the volume and with any intersecting horizons or slices.

    Push it to the far left. Click the Y slice and push it to the far right.

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    September 2008

     Now uncheck the X and Y checkboxes at the lower left of the window. This will hide the two

    seismic sections so we can concentrate on the horizon and wells. When you bring them back,

    they will return in their new position at the back of the display volume.

    Zooming

    We will now zoom into the zone of interest.

    For non-wireless three-button mouse devices:From above the 1010 value on the left , press the middle mouse button down and drag it to about

    the 1125 value on the right  (see below).

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    View3D 17

    September 2008

    Saving the Viewing Parameters

    This will let you save your work and retrieve it again, which is very useful if you must interrupt

    this tutorial.

    From the Main menu, select View>Display>Scene. A View Parameter  dialog now appears onthe right side with the Display>Scene tabs selected.

    Click New to bring up the Scene Manager  window. Enter a name for the scene and click OK.

     Now you can bring back this exact view by reselecting View>Display>Scene, selecting thename of the scene and clicking Load. Once you've saved a scene, the program will also ask

    whether to load that scene when you restart this project.

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    Stopping This Tutorial

    First, save your scene, as described above. Either select File>Exit or close the View3D windowto close the Visual3D session.

     Adding Slices

    If you have stopped the program, reload the View3D program and select Yes for Reloading The

    Last Scene.

    Select Slice mode from the bottom left menu of the Display window, if it is not already selected.

    Click the X box to display the X-axis slice as shown below:

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    Repeat these steps for the Y slice, checking its box at the bottom left. Repeat these steps for theZ slice, checking its box at the bottom left and then moving it to about 1100 ms, to get the

    display below:

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    Displaying Attr ibute Values

    For View3D, attributes and seismic data are treated the same except that only seismic data can berepresented by wiggle traces. View3D can only display one "attribute" volume and one "seismic"

    volume at the same time.

    Click scaled_porosity.vol in the Post-stack  folder of the Project Loaded section and drag it

    into the display. As the display's dimensions are set by the first  volume loaded (hence by the

    seismic.vol volume), this volume's geometry does not affect the overall display. Therefore, you

    do not need to see the seismic parameters for this volume.

    There are also right-click pop-up menus in the Data window that are useful. See the online help

    for more on these menus.The Display window will now show the attribute (porosity) as a color scale and the Attribute

    color key can be displayed through View>Color Volume>Color Scale.

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    September 2008

    Changing Color Keys For Color Plots

    We will now change the attribute color key to emphasize the higher porosity values. The default

    Color Map is Rainbow, as used above.

    First, select Color Scale from both the View>Seismic Volume and View>Color Volume 

    submenus to display the color scales.Then, select View Parameters from the View>Color Volume submenu (either  the Seismic

    Volume or  the Color Volume submenu) to bring up the View Parameters dialog on the righthand side of the window.

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    If not already selected, select Color  for the Color Attribute Type.Click the Color  button to bring up the Color Scale window.

    Scroll down to the Lightning color map and select it.

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    Click OK to apply the change and close the Colormap Settings window.

     Now the high porosity values are red or yellow and are easier to notice on the screen, while thelower porosity values, in which we are not interested, are in similar shades of green and easily

    ignored. Note also that the attribute data does not extend as far as the seismic, stopping at 1200,

    so we can see the seismic data below as a brighter color.

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    24 View3D

    September 2008

    If the Upper  and Lower  values in the Color Mapping section do not approximately match our

    values (-0.09 and 0.15: the negative just reflects measurement inaccuracy as the lowest possiblevalue should be 0.0, the 0.15 shows that the area has no high porosity), then your plot may not

    resemble ours.

    To change this, change the Data Minimum and Data Maximum attribute (i.e. porosity) values

    respectively in the Selected Seismic Table and  click  Plot.

    Click the X at the right top of the View Parameters panel to close it so the display panel is

    wider.

    To further demonstrate the porosity value, while in Slide mode , slide the Z slice up throughthe horizon to see how the porosity map changes.

    Then move the Z slice back to its original position at about 1100 ms.

    Showing Traces and Color Plots Together

    We will now show the seismic data in a form that is not hidden by the scaled porosity colors,

    essentially co-rendering the two sets of data.

    Select Seismic Volume>Wiggle from the View menu. The seismic will now be displayed aswiggle traces on top of the attribute colors.

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    To return the seismic to its color display, reselect this menu option to turn it off.

    Special Zoom Views

    In the View>Color Volume menu, uncheck the Color Scale option to hide the color key. Do thesame for the Seismic Volume menu. At the bottom of the window, uncheck the Y and Z 

    checkboxes, so only the X plane is left.These steps will unclutter the view.

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    Birds' Eye View

    Press on the keyboard to use this feature. A view of the entire volume will be

    displayed in the upper right corner. This view will match the orientation of the current view.

    Press on the keyboard again to close the birds' eye view.

    Magnifying Glass Zoom

    Click the Magnify button on the left side or press (or m) on the keyboard to use thisfeature.

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     Note: The Display Window must be active for this to work. If you are doing this tutorial by

    using a pdf file on a screen, you may have that screen active when you press  and then

    nothing happens. In that case, click on the Display Window to activate it and repress .

    A square appears in the middle of the view, magnifying the zone behind it. This magnifyingglass now moves with the mouse. You can still use the middle mouse button for zooming or the

    left button for moving slices while this feature is up. You can also make this square wider or

    smaller with  and . Press or click   again to

    turn it off.

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    Fences and Probes

     Now we will show alternative ways to display parts of the volume. First, uncheck the X

    checkbox to remove that plane (clearing the display except for the horizon) and click Home once so the top of the volume is visible.

    On the right side of the window, we have the Slice Mode buttons.

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    Making Fences

    A fence is a series of slices connected end-to-end, resembling a fence (of course). They can be

    very useful to follow channels, bars or reefs, or to outline a property of land.

    To create a fence, click the Fence icon . Then click the front left side to start the fence (you

    must click on the top plane, not on the side).

    Click the end of that fence panel on the front right side. Now click in a direction to the upper

    right. Click further right and then click to the lower right. See below.

    Then click the Slide icon to leave Fence mode and therefore finish that fence. In other

    words, you enter Fence mode, click the corners of each fence section and then exit Fence mode

    to create a fence.Once you have created a fence, you can move its segments around in Slide mode by dragging

    the corners.

    In the following example, the fence created above was moved to match the target channel. Notehow it also emphasizes the horizon structure.

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     Now click the Delete Slice icon (the box with the X, ) and select one part of the fence to

    remove the entire fence. Remember to then select Slide, so you do not stay in Delete mode.

    Probes

    A probe is an orthogonal shape that shows the attribute or seismic in a different way than slices.

    While slices must extend the entire height of the volume, probes can be limited just to an area of

    interest, making them ideal for screen captures. You can also create inside angles (whichresembles "steps" in the probe).

    Since we do not need the entire volume for probes, click the Zoom In  button twice. If

    necessary, press  and move the mouse, holding the middle button down, until theTarget_hrz horizon is in the middle of the display.

    Click the X checkbox at the bottom to add that slice. From the View>Probe menu, select AddProbe. The initial orthogonal shape is added automatically.

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    To adjust the probe, click exactly on an edge to create a red line. Then drag that edge.

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     Now we will add a corner reentrant. Click precisely on the foremost upper corner. The probe

    now has a cut-in section.

    Click an edge of the horizontal part of this reentrant and slide it downwards towards the horizon.

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    When you are finished, select Delete current Probe or Delete all probe from the Probe menu

    to remove the probe display. Uncheck the X checkbox at the bottom.

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    Showing Well Log Data

    First zoom out with the Page Down key to see the top of the volume. Then select View>Well>

    Show Annotation to display the well names at the top of the plot and the top names on the

    wells.

    Zoom back into the horizon section. Select Well>View Parameters from the View menu to

     bring that dialog up on the right hand side.

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    The Top Disk is the marker that indicates a top on the wellbore. The Thickness value refers tothe thickness of the top disks. The Well Bore refers to the thickness of the actual hole outline in

    the display.

    Select the Show checkbox. Select Porosity for the Center Cylinder  tab.

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    Enter the following parameters (if not already set), so the center porosity plot is easier to see:Well Bore = "0.5".

    Top Disk = "2".Variable Radius selected from the Appearance box.

    Keep the other parameters the same. Below is the result. Note how the radius changes to match

    the density values.

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    Below is an example where the density log was plotted on the left side and nothing plotted in thecenter. The Well Annotation has been turned on.

    Selecting Which Wells to View

    From the View menu, select Well>Well List to bring up the Well Lis t Dialog. In the Well ID column, use  and the mouse to select all the wells except  16-08. Click Unload. Thenclick OK.

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     Now only the 16-08 well is displayed.

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    Emphasizing Value Ranges and Setting Transparency: Visual Control

    Check the X and Y checkboxes at the bottom of the Display window to show those slices.

    Position them once again at the back of the volume (they should be there automatically if you

    have not moved them).

    If the View Parameters dialog is not still up, bring it up through View>Seismic Volume>View

    Parameters. Select the Volume tab.

    Select the Color radio button at the top of that dialog for the Scaled Porosity attribute viewing parameters.

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    Unselect the Freehand checkbox and select the Linear  check box. Click on the middle red dot atthe left side of the upper box. Then drag this toward the right, bringing a vertical line along, to

    about 3/4 over. The Auto Apply box should be on by default.

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    What this means is that all the values whose colors fit under  the now dark section will not  be

    displayed on the plot. Therefore, only the high porosity areas will be colored. The low porosityvalues will not appear. Also, the underlying seismic data will be easier to see.

    However, as it is also colored, we have difficulty distinguishing it from the attribute. We could

    turn it off using the Volume Selection window (View>Seismic Volume>Data Selection  and

    unselect the Seismic checkbox), but then we have no seismic. Instead, we will change the color

    key for the seismic.

     Now check the Seismic radio button, and click the Color  button to bring up a Color Key

    window. Scroll up the list and select Gray Scale. Click OK. Now the seismic data is easilydistinguished from the attribute data.

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     Now we will change the Visual parameters for the seismic. Do not uncheck the Freehand 

    checkbox this time. Now draw a curve from the lower left to the upper right, such as below.

     Now the seismic peaks are emphasized.

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    For the Display mode, now select Volume instead of Slice.

    The entire seismic and attribute volumes are now displayed.

     Now, from the View>Seismic Volume menu, unselect Show Seismic to remove the seismicdata from the display. Now only the attribute data (i.e., higher density) is shown. Note that it maytake a few seconds to replot.

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    By selecting to show only the end values, we can highlight anomalies.

    Removing Data From View3D

    At the bottom left of the window, reselect Slice instead of Volume for the Display mode. Turn

    the X, Y and Z slices off.

    Hide the displayed well through the Well List window by selecting the well, clicking Unload 

    and OK, as before.

    If not up, bring up the Volume Selection panel (View>Seismic Volume>Data Selection ).

    Click the Trash Can button to the right of the Color Volume's Color Key field.

    This will unload the attribute plot, leaving only the seismic, well and horizon data. We couldhave instead hidden the attribute plot without removing it by unselecting the checkbox to the left

    of  Color Volume.

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    Loading Data Slices as Horizons

     Now we will load a Data Slice based on the Target_hrz horizon. In the Data Slice section of the

    Project Loaded column, there are two data slices. The slice seismic target  is just a sparser-

    sampled version of the Target_hrz horizon, and we will not use it. It, however, was used in

    EMERGE to create another slice, the scaled_porosity slice. This slice will display porositycalculated by the EMERGE program. Click and drag it into the display.

    Open the View Parameters section again and select the Surface tab.

    Highlight only scaled_porosity and click Apply.

    The Display window will show the same amplitude surface as Target_hrz, but as the sampling

    rate was lower, it is not as smoothed as the first horizon we used. The color plot will now

    represent scaled porosity, not two-way time. In this display, we have turned the Horizon Color

    Key  legend on through View>Surface>Color Scale.

     Not

    ethat

     blueand

    viol

    et

    repr ese

    nt

    moGreen and blue represent moderate porosity and yellow and red represent insufficient porosity.

    Click the Wire Frame check box in the Show section.

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    Then click Apply. 

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    View3D 47

    The wire frame matches the TWT data and shows the effect of the sampling rate. By the way,

    this is a good surface to try the Magnifying Glass view we talked about earlier (as brought up bythe M key).

    Uncheck Wire Frame and check the Contour  box.

    Then click Apply. 

    These contours reflect the TWT structure. You can set different contour parameters by clicking

    the Options button to bring up the Horizon Contour Settings dialog.

    When you have finished, close the window or select File>Exit.