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Natural fractures in a United Kingdom shale reservoir analog, Cleveland Basin, northeast England

Imber, Jonathan; Armstrong, Howard; Clancy, Sarah; Daniels, Susan; Herringshaw, Liam; McCaffrey, Ken; Rodrigues, Joel; Trabucho-Alexandre, João; Warren, Cassandra

Authors

Jonathan Imber

Howard Armstrong

Sarah Clancy

Susan Daniels

Liam Herringshaw

Ken McCaffrey

Joel Rodrigues

João Trabucho-Alexandre

Cassandra Warren



Abstract

Faults and fractures within the well-exposed Lower Jurassic Cleveland Ironstone and Whitby Mudstone Formations may provide insights into the tectonic history of gas-prospective, Mississippian shale in northern England. Subvertical opening mode fractures occur throughout the Cleveland Basin. Bed-parallel fractures, some of which contain blocky calcite fills, occur preferentially within well-bedded, clay-rich mudstones of the Cleveland Ironstone and Whitby Mudstone Formations at Jet Wyke and Port Mulgrave. Subvertical fractures display abutting or curving-parallel relationships with under- and overlying bed-parallel fractures. Together, these observations suggest that bed-parallel fractures, at times, acted as free surfaces. Some bed-parallel fractures curve toward and branch from calcite-filled fault slip surfaces, indicating that bed-parallel fracturing and normal faulting were synchronous, occurring within a regional stress field with vertical maximum principal stress. This apparent paradox can be explained by normal compaction, followed by cementation and coupling between pore pressure and minimum horizontal stress driven by poroelastic deformation or incipient slip along critically stressed normal faults, causing elevation of horizontal stress in excess of the vertical stress within clay-rich units. Propagation of bed-parallel fractures was enhanced by dilatational strains adjacent to normal fault planes. Bed-parallel fractures have not been observed within more SiO₂-rich units at the top of the Whitby Mudstone Formation at Whitby East Cliff, or within well-bedded, clay-rich shale at Saltwick Nab. This observation is consistent with the lack of normal faulting at Saltwick Nab, and the Whitby Mudstone Formation having been drained by structural and/or stratigraphical juxtaposition against permeable Middle Jurassic sandstones at both these localities.

Citation

Imber, J., Armstrong, H., Clancy, S., Daniels, S., Herringshaw, L., McCaffrey, K., …Warren, C. (2014). Natural fractures in a United Kingdom shale reservoir analog, Cleveland Basin, northeast England. AAPG Bulletin, 98(11), 2411-2437. https://doi.org/10.1306/07141413144

Acceptance Date Jul 25, 2014
Publication Date 2014-11
Deposit Date Mar 21, 2016
Publicly Available Date Mar 29, 2024
Journal AAPG bulletin
Print ISSN 0149-1423
Publisher American Association of Petroleum Geologists
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 98
Issue 11
Pages 2411-2437
DOI https://doi.org/10.1306/07141413144
Keywords Fuel Technology; Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous); Energy Engineering and Power Technology; Geology; Geochemistry and Petrology
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/433930
Publisher URL http://archives.datapages.com/data/bulletns/2014/11nov/BLTN13144/BLTN13144.html
Additional Information Author's accepted manuscript of article published in: AAPG bulletin, 2014, v.98, issue 11

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