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Plotting of seismic data using variable-density or variable-area wiggle displays. Plotting of amplitude and phase spectra. Creation of animations and crossplots using arbitrary trace header mnemonics.
The seisplot module provides a single, highly flexible method plot() to display seismic data. Methods toggle() and wipe() can be used to create animations that can be saved as images or movies. Method spectrum() can be used to display amplitude and phase spectra of seismic data. Method crossplot() can be used to plot one trace header mnemonic against another one, possibly colored by a third mnemonic. All methods are highly flexible and displays can be easily adjusted via optional parameters.
The module was designed to get decent displays of seismic data in a way that is more convenient than going through many individual Matplotlib function calls explicitly. However, if required Matplotlib methods can also be called directly. The code is pure Python and kept deliberately simple to get students participating our Geophysics classes and exercises at university going with Python and seismic data.

Required: numpy, matplotlib
Optional: pandas (if trace headers for crossplots are stored in DataFrames), numba
Install from PyPI:
$> pip install seisplot
Install directly from gitlab:
$> pip install git+https://gitlab.kit.edu/thomas.hertweck/seisplot.git
Editable install from source:
This version is intended for experts who would like to test the latest version or make modifications. Normal users should prefer to install a stable version.
$> git clone https://gitlab.kit.edu/thomas.hertweck/seisplot.git
Once you acquired the source, you can install an editable version of seisplot with:
$> cd seisplot
$> pip install -e .
For a demonstration of various features and much more, please visit the "examples" folder in the repository where several Jupyter notebooks (tutorials) are available.
Plotting seismic data (for instance, read with our seisio package and therefore available as Numpy structured array including trace headers) can be as simple as:
import seisplot
fig, ax = seisplot.plot(data, haxis="offset", width=4, height=6,
vlabel="Time (s)", hlabel="Offset (m)",
vmajorticks=0.2, vminorticks=0.1,
hminorticks=500, vgrid="major")
The variables fig and ax are standard Matplotlib figure and axis handles that can be used to tweak the display further. You could also create those first using fig, ax = plt.subplots(1, 1) and pass them to the plot() method. In this way, it is possible to, for instance, create several seismic displays in one figure, or create displays that share the y-axis (usually "time").
A display toggle can, for instance, be produced in the following way:
ani, fig, ax = seisplot.toggle([data_1, data_2, data_diff],
interval=1000, repeat_delay=0,
hlabel="offset (m)", vlabel="time (s)")
The returned animation-artist object can be used to save an animated image or a movie.
An animated wipe can, for instance, be produced in the following way:
ani, fig, ax = seisplot.wipe(data_1, data_2, blit=True,
nwipe=30, wipecolor="blue",
interval=5, repeat_delay=0,
hlabel="offset (m)", vlabel="time (s)")
Again, the returned animation-artist object can be used to save an animated image or a movie.
Plotting an amplitude spectrum of seismic data (for instance, read with seisio) can be as simple as:
win = np.hamming
fig, ax = seisplot.spectrum(data, amplitude=True, window=win, scale="dB",
hlabel="Frequency (Hz)", vlabel="Magnitude (dB)",
vgrid="major", hgrid="major")
Here, a Hamming window is applied to the data before performing the Fourier transform, and the amplitude spectrum is converted to "dB" before being plotted. An unwrapped phase spectrum displayed in degrees could be obtained in the following way:
fig, ax = seisplot.spectrum(data, phase=True, unwrap=True, degree=True,
hlabel="Frequency (Hz)", vlabel="Phase (deg)",
linewidth=2, title="Unwrapped phase spectrum")
These methods produce similar results to Matplotlib's magnitude_spectrum(), phase_spectrum() and angle_spectrum() functions but have more options. In case of entire gathers, the spectrum is averaged over all traces.
The following shows an exemplary command to create a crossplot of inline vs. crossline colored by the total statics value of each trace stored in the trace header "tstat".
fig, ax = seisplot.crossplot(data, hkey="xline", vkey="iline",
color_by="header", ckey="tstat",
hlabel="Crossline #", vlabel="Inline #",
markersize=5, equal_axes=True, colorbar=True,
colorbarlabel="Total statics (ms)")
As can be seen, all methods of seisplot use a similar syntax, which makes using this module quite convenient. Under the hood the different methods actually share most of the code.
Dr. Thomas Hertweck, geophysics@email.de
If you use the "seisplot" module and you find it useful, getting some feedback would be very much appreciated. If you would like to cite this module, please use, for instance:
Hertweck, T. (2025). seisplot: A Python library for visualisation of seismic data. Version 1.4.0. url: https://gitlab.kit.edu/thomas.hertweck/seisplot/ (visited on 10/04/2025).
Adjust year, version and last visited date as required. Here's a BibTeX entry:
@software{seisplot,
author = {Hertweck, Thomas},
year = {2025},
title = {seisplot: A {P}ython library for visualisation of seismic data},
url = {https://gitlab.kit.edu/thomas.hertweck/seisplot/},
urldate = {2025-10-04},
version = {1.4.0}
}
This project is licensed under the LGPL v3.0 License - see the LICENSE.md file for details
FAQs
Plotting of seismic data
We found that seisplot demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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