Ito, Takatoshi et al. (2013): Determination of stress state in deep subsea formation by combination of hydraulic fracturing in situ test and core analysis; a case study in the IODP Expedition 319

Leg/Site/Hole:
IODP 319
IODP 319 C0010
IODP 332 C0010
IODP 319 C0011
IODP 322 C0011
IODP 333 C0011
Identifier:
2013-046062
georefid

10.1002/jgrb.50086
doi

Creator:
Ito, Takatoshi
Tohoku University, Institute of Fluid Science, Sendai, Japan
author

Funato, Akio
OYO Company, Japan
author

Lin, Weiren
Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Japan
author

Doan, Mai-Linh
Universite Joseph Fourier, France
author

Boutt, David F.
University of Massachusetts at Amherst, United States
author

Kano, Yasuyuki
Kyoto University, Japan
author

Ito, Hisao
Pennsylvania State University, United States
author

Saffer, Demian
University of Southampton, United Kingdom
author

McNeill, Lisa C.
University of Connecticut, United States
author

Byrne, Timothy
author

Moe, Kyaw Thu
author

Identification:
Determination of stress state in deep subsea formation by combination of hydraulic fracturing in situ test and core analysis; a case study in the IODP Expedition 319
2013
Journal of Geophysical Research
American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
118
B3
1203-1215
In situ test of hydraulic fracturing (HF) provides the only way to observe in situ stress magnitudes directly. The maximum and minimum horizontal stresses, S (sub Hmax) and S (sub hmin) , are determined from critical borehole pressures, i.e., the reopening pressure P (sub r) and the shut-in pressure P (sub s) , etc, observed during the test. However, there is inevitably a discrepancy between actual and measured values of the critical pressures, and this discrepancy is very significant for P (sub r) . For effective measurement of P (sub r) , it is necessary for the fracturing system to have a sufficiently small compliance. A diagnostic procedure to evaluate whether the compliance of the employed fracturing system is appropriate for S (sub Hmax) determination from P (sub r) was developed. Furthermore, a new method for stress measurement not restricted by the system compliance and P (sub r) is herein proposed. In this method, the magnitudes and orientations of S (sub Hmax) and S (sub hmin) are determined from (i) the cross-sectional shape of a core sample and (ii) P (sub s) obtained by the HF test performed near the core depth. These ideas were applied for stress measurement in a central region of the Kumano fore-arc basin at a water depth of 2054 m using a 1.6 km riser hole drilled in the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 319. As a result, the stress decoupling through a boundary at 1285 m below seafloor was detected. The boundary separates new upper layers and old lower ones with an age gap of approximately 1.8 Ma, which is possibly the accretionary prism. The stress state in the lower layers is consistent with that observed in the outer edge of accretionary prism. Abstract Copyright (2013), . American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:33.1236
West:136.4112East: 136.5256
South:32.4944

Solid-earth geophysics; accretionary wedges; boreholes; cores; crust; Expedition 319; fracture zones; hydraulic fracturing; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; IODP Site C0010; IODP Site C0011; mid-ocean ridges; NanTroSEIZE; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; ocean floors; oceanic crust; Pacific Ocean; physical properties; pressure; Shikoku Basin; stress; West Pacific;

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