A scale-independent approach to fracture intensity and average spacing measurement

被引:334
作者
Ortega, OJ
Marrett, RA
Laubach, SE
机构
[1] Shell Int Explorat & Prod BV, Houston, TX 77079 USA
[2] Univ Texas, Dept Geol Sci, John A & Katherine G Jackson Sch Geosci, Austin, TX 78712 USA
[3] Univ Texas, Bur Econ Geol, John A & Katherine G Jackson Sch Geosci, Austin, TX 78713 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1306/08250505059
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Fracture intensity, the number of fractures per unit length along a sample line, is an important attribute of fracture systems that can be problematic to establish in the subsurface. Lack of adequate constraints on fracture intensity may limit the economic exploitation of fractured reservoirs because intensity describes the abundance of fractures potentially available for fluid flow and the probability of encountering fractures in a borehole. Traditional methods of fracture-intensity measurement are inadequate because they ignore the wide spectrum of fracture sizes found in many fracture systems and the consequent scale dependence of fracture intensity. An alternative approach makes use of fracture-size distributions, which allow more meaningful comparisons between different locations and allow microfractures in subsurface samples to be used for fracture-intensity measurement. Comparisons are more meaningful because sampling artifacts can be recognized and avoided, and because common thresholds of fracture size can be enforced for counting in different locations. Additionally, quantification of the fracture-size distribution provides a mechanism for evaluation of uncertainties. Estimates of fracture intensity using this approach for illustrate two carbonate beds in the Sierra Madre Oriental Mexico,, how size-cognizant measurements cast new light on widely accepted interpretation of geologic controls of fracture intensity.
引用
收藏
页码:193 / 208
页数:16
相关论文
共 70 条
[41]  
Marrett R, 1999, GEOLOGY, V27, P799, DOI 10.1130/0091-7613(1999)027<0799:EOPLSF>2.3.CO
[42]  
2
[43]   Aggregate properties of fracture populations [J].
Marrett, R .
JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY, 1996, 18 (2-3) :169-178
[44]  
Marrett R., 1997, FRACTURED RESERVOIRS, P217
[45]  
MARRETT R, 2001, U TEXAS AUSTIN BUREA, V28, P109
[46]   Circular scanlines and circular windows: new tools for characterizing the geometry of fracture traces [J].
Mauldon, M ;
Dunne, WM ;
Rohrbaugh, MB .
JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY, 2001, 23 (2-3) :247-258
[47]   JOINT SPACING IN SEDIMENTARY-ROCKS [J].
NARR, W ;
SUPPE, J .
JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY, 1991, 13 (09) :1037-&
[48]  
NARR W, 1991, AAPG BULL, V75, P1300
[49]  
Narr W, 1996, AAPG BULL, V80, P1565
[50]  
Nelson R.A., 1985, Geologic Analysis of Naturally Fractured Reservoirs