TY - JOUR
T1 - Localized rotation of principal stress around faults and fractures determined from borehole breakouts in hole B of the Taiwan Chelungpu-fault Drilling Project (TCDP)
AU - Lin, Weiren
AU - Yeh, En Chao
AU - Hung, Jih Hao
AU - Haimson, Bezalel
AU - Hirono, Tetsuro
N1 - Funding Information:
We greatly appreciate Mark Tingay, the guest editor and two reviewers (Birgit Müller and the other anonymous reviewer) for their valuable and constructive comments and suggestions which helped us to improve our manuscript much. We gratefully acknowledge H. Ito, W. Soh, M. Kinoshita, and S. Saito of the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) for useful discussions, C.-Y. Wang, K.-F. Ma, S.-R. Song, and Y.-B. Tsai, who are the principal investigators of TCDP, Taiwan, and Y. Kawamura, Y. Sanada, and T. Moe of the Center for Deep Earth Exploration at JAMSTEC for helpful support during the FMI logging in TCDP hole B. W. Lin thanks the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) for financial support (Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research C: 19540453).
PY - 2010/2/25
Y1 - 2010/2/25
N2 - To reveal details of stress perturbations associated with faults and fractures, we investigated the faults and large fractures accompanied by stress-induced borehole breakouts or drilling-induced tensile fractures in hole B of the Taiwan Chelungpu-fault Drilling Project (TCDP). Then, we determined the relationship between the faults and fractures and stress orientation changes. We identified faults and fractures from electrical images of the borehole wall obtained by downhole logging but also from photographs and descriptions of retrieved core samples, and measured the variations in the principal horizontal stress orientation ascertained from borehole breakouts observed on the electrical images in the vicinity of the faults and fractures. Identification of geological structures (faults, fractures, and lithologic boundaries) by electrical images only is difficult and may sometimes yield incorrect results. In a novel approach, therefore, we used both the electrical images and core photographs to identify geological structures. We found four patterns of stress orientation change, or no change, in the vicinity of faults and fractures in TCDP hole B: (i) abrupt (discontinuous) rotation in the vicinity of faults or fractures; (ii) gradual rotation; (iii) suppression of breakouts at faults, fractures, or lithologic boundaries; and (iv) no change in the stress orientation. We recognized stress fluctuations, that is, heterogeneous mesoscale (≥ 10 cm) stress distributions with respect to both stress orientation and magnitude. In addition, we found that stress state changes occurred frequently in the vicinity of faults, fractures, and lithologic boundaries.
AB - To reveal details of stress perturbations associated with faults and fractures, we investigated the faults and large fractures accompanied by stress-induced borehole breakouts or drilling-induced tensile fractures in hole B of the Taiwan Chelungpu-fault Drilling Project (TCDP). Then, we determined the relationship between the faults and fractures and stress orientation changes. We identified faults and fractures from electrical images of the borehole wall obtained by downhole logging but also from photographs and descriptions of retrieved core samples, and measured the variations in the principal horizontal stress orientation ascertained from borehole breakouts observed on the electrical images in the vicinity of the faults and fractures. Identification of geological structures (faults, fractures, and lithologic boundaries) by electrical images only is difficult and may sometimes yield incorrect results. In a novel approach, therefore, we used both the electrical images and core photographs to identify geological structures. We found four patterns of stress orientation change, or no change, in the vicinity of faults and fractures in TCDP hole B: (i) abrupt (discontinuous) rotation in the vicinity of faults or fractures; (ii) gradual rotation; (iii) suppression of breakouts at faults, fractures, or lithologic boundaries; and (iv) no change in the stress orientation. We recognized stress fluctuations, that is, heterogeneous mesoscale (≥ 10 cm) stress distributions with respect to both stress orientation and magnitude. In addition, we found that stress state changes occurred frequently in the vicinity of faults, fractures, and lithologic boundaries.
KW - Borehole breakout
KW - Fault
KW - Fracture
KW - Stress orientation
KW - Stress perturbation
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U2 - 10.1016/j.tecto.2009.06.020
DO - 10.1016/j.tecto.2009.06.020
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:76049112276
SN - 0040-1951
VL - 482
SP - 82
EP - 91
JO - Tectonophysics
JF - Tectonophysics
IS - 1-4
ER -