Fracture-pattern variations around a major fold and their implications regarding fracture prediction using limited data: an example from the Bristol Channel Basin

Author:

Belayneh Mandefro1,Cosgrove John W.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College of Science Technology and Medicine, Royal School of Mines Prince Consort Road, London SW7 2BP, UK

Abstract

AbstractThis chapter focuses on the evolution of fractures during the inversion of the Bristol Channel Basin, and examines the lateral and vertical consistency of the resulting fracture network within the alternating Liassic limestones and shales. The study has two principal aims. The first is to determine the reliability of fracture systems deduced using more limited data from less well-exposed regions or unexposed regions sampled only by drilling, and the second is to assess whether the fractures are linked to a regional stress field or are the result of a local stress field controlled by the geometry and mechanism of formation of a fold.The joint patterns were studied using a combination of scanline and window sampling, and the results indicate that there are considerable variations in the fracture systems between adjacent limestone beds and also lateral variation within the same bed. Although there is little doubt that the independent development of fracture patterns in adjacent limestone beds is facilitated by the intervening shale horizons, which allow them to become mechanically decoupled, the reasons for these variations are still unclear.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

Reference46 articles.

1. Al-Mahruqi S. A. S. (2001) Fracture patterns and fracture propagation as a function of lithology. PhD thesis (Imperial College University of London).

2. Belayneh M. (2003) Analysis of natural fracture networks in massive and well-bedded carbonates and the impact of these networks on fluid flow in dual porosity modelling. PhD thesis (Imperial College University of London, UK).

3. Palaeostress orientation inferred from surface morphology of joints on the southern margin of the Bristol Channel Basin, UK

4. Mechanism of brittle fracture of rock

5. Blès J. L. Feuga B. (1986) The Fracture of Rocks (North Oxford Academic, Oxford).

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