Geostatistical seismic inversion is commonly used to infer the spatial
distribution of the subsurface petro-elastic properties by perturbing the model
parameter space through iterative stochastic sequential
simulations/co-simulations. The spatial uncertainty of the inferred
petro-elastic properties is represented with the updated a posteriori variance
from an ensemble of the simulated realizations. Within this setting, the
large-scale geological (metaparameters) used to generate the petro-elastic
realizations, such as the spatial correlation model and the global a priori
distribution of the properties of interest, are assumed to be known and
stationary for the entire inversion domain. This assumption leads to
underestimation of the uncertainty associated with the inverted models. We
propose a practical framework to quantify uncertainty of the large-scale
geological parameters in seismic inversion. The framework couples
geostatistical seismic inversion with a stochastic adaptive sampling and
Bayesian inference of the metaparameters to provide a more accurate and
realistic prediction of uncertainty not restricted by heavy assumptions on
large-scale geological parameters. The proposed framework is illustrated with
both synthetic and real case studies. The results show the ability retrieve
more reliable acoustic impedance models with a more adequate uncertainty spread
when compared with conventional geostatistical seismic inversion techniques.
The proposed approach separately account for geological uncertainty at
large-scale (metaparameters) and local scale (trace-by-trace inversion)