Natural Fractures in shale: A review and new observations
The University of Texas at Austin
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Abstract
Natural fractures have long been suspected as a factor in production from shale reservoirs because gas and oil production commonly exceeds the rates expected from low-porosity and low-permeability shale host rock. Many shale outcrops, cores, and image logs contain fractures or fracture traces, and microseismic event patterns associated with hydraulic-fracture stimulation have been ascribed to natural fracture reactivation. Here we review previous work, and present new core and outcrop data from 18 shale plays that reveal common types of shale fractures and their mineralization, orientation, and size patterns. A wide range of shales have a common suite of types and configurations of fractures: those at high…
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Authors
5Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Geology
- Oil shale
- Natural (archaeology)
- Geochemistry
- Mining engineering
- Petroleum engineering
- Paleontology
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