RI 7500 Prediction Of Oil-And Gas-Bearing Rock Fractures From Surface Structural Features

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
W. K. Overbey
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
17
File Size:
738 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1971

Abstract

Knowledge of fracture systems in oil or gas reservoirs is essential to the efficiency of both primary and secondary production operations. A relationship was established between structural features of the surface and both natural and induced fractures in oil and gas reservoirs, thus providing a method of predicting the direction of rock fracture prior to field development and well completion. Correlations between the surface features and under-ground fractures resulted from analysis of joint strike measurements, bottom-hole impression packer surveys, photographs of hydraulically fractured wells, fracture data from oriented cores, in situ strain measurements from formation outcrops, and lineament analyses from aerial photographs. The mean orientation of surface fractures, lineaments, and stress field directions ranged from N 53° E to N 73° E, compared with an average orientation of N 63° E for the hydraulically induced fractures. Tectonic stress field was shown to influence the direction of hydraulically induced fractures. This report presents the details and application of techniques to obtain the orientation of the principal horizontal compressive stress field component and thus the direction of induced fractures.
Citation

APA: W. K. Overbey  (1971)  RI 7500 Prediction Of Oil-And Gas-Bearing Rock Fractures From Surface Structural Features

MLA: W. K. Overbey RI 7500 Prediction Of Oil-And Gas-Bearing Rock Fractures From Surface Structural Features. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1971.

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