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Palaeopressure reconstruction to explain observed natural hydraulic fractures in the Cleveland Basin
Affiliation:1. Key Laboratory of Petroleum Resource Research, Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100029, China;2. Sisyphe, UMR7619, University Pierre et Marie Curie, 75252, Paris Cedex 05, France;3. No. 9 Oil Production Company of Daqing Oilfield Company Ltd., Daqing, 163853, China;1. Department of Geology, College of Science, University of Baghdad, Iraq;2. Geomark Research Ltd, Houston, TX, USA;1. Department of Earth Sciences, Durham University, South Road, Durham, DH1 3LE, UK;2. ConocoPhillips UK Ltd., Rubislaw House, North Anderson Drive, Aberdeen, AB156FZ, UK
Abstract:Natural fractures observed within the Lower Jurassic shales of the Cleveland Basin show evidence that pore pressure must have exceeded the lithostatic pressure in order to initiate horizontal fractures observed in cliff sections. Other field localities do not show horizontal fracturing, indicating lower pore pressures there. Deriving the burial history of the basin from outcrop, VR and heat-flow data gives values of sedimentation rates and periods of depositional hiatus which can be used to assess the porosity and pore pressure evolution within the shales. This gives us our estimate of overpressure caused by disequilibrium compaction alone, of 11 MPa, not sufficient to initiate horizontal fractures. However, as the thermal information shows us that temperatures were in excess of 95 °C, secondary overpressure mechanisms such as clay diagenesis and hydrocarbon generation occurred, contributing an extra 11 MPa of overpressure. The remaining 8.5 MPa of overpressure required to initiate horizontal fractures was caused by fluid expansion due to hydrocarbon generation and tectonic compression related to Alpine orogenic and Atlantic opening events. Where horizontal fractures are not present within the Lower Jurassic shales, overpressure was unable to build up as high due to proximity to the lateral draining of pressure within the Dogger Formation. The palaeopressure reconstruction techniques used within this study give a quick assessment of the pressure history of a basin and help to identify shales which may currently have enhanced permeability due to naturally-occurring hydraulic fractures.
Keywords:Overpressure  Hydraulic fracture  Palaeopressure  Cleveland Basin  Shale
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