“…The polarization direction of the leading split shear wave may give information about the orientation of in-situ stresses, and these stresses strongly affect several reservoir characteristics related to drilling, simulation and production (Bruno and Winterstein, 1994). In recent years, many processing techniques have been developed to estimate and interpret this polarization azimuth from recorded multicomponent seismic data (e.g., Alford, 1986;Thomsen, 1988;Winterstein and Meadows, 1991;Li and Crampin, 1993a;Lefeuvre et al, 1992;Zeng and MacBeth, 1993a, b;MacBeth et al, 1994). The polarization azimuth of the leading split shear wave, as related to the direction of the maximum in-situ stress, may vary both laterally with structural location and vertically with depth due to material properties, stratigraphy, bedding, and faults (Warpinski and Teufel, 1991).…”