PS
Elastic
Fracture Analysis in the Tight Gas Sands of the Mesaverde Formation, Piceance
Basin, Colorado*
By
Jay R. Scheevel1
Search and Discovery Article #10114 (2006)
Posted October 6, 2006
*Adapted from poster presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, April 9-12, 2006
Click to view posters in PDF format
(~1.1 mb).
1Scheevel Geo Technologies, LLC, Grand Junction, CO ([email protected])
Abstract
I present theory and supporting mechanical data
demonstrating that elevated pore pressures (and consequent
elastic
grain
shrinkage) are capable of inducing tensional framework stresses in the Mesaverde
rocks of the Piceance Basin of northwestern Colorado. Elevated pore pressures in
the basin are the result of gas generation in Upper Cretaceous Mesaverde coals.
Tensional framework stress conditions inevitably result in the spontaneous
creation and opening of extension fractures in these clastic lithologies.
This treatment makes use of linear
elastic
theory. I
solve explicitly for the contributions of both framework- and grain-volume
deformations resulting from specific overburden-, tectonic-, pore-pressure-, and
temperature-induced strains. Fracturing is enabled by the presence of a zero
lateral strain boundary condition. This boundary condition is imposed because of
the semi-infinite lateral extent of layered rocks in the subsurface basinal
setting.
Data from the Multi-Well Experiment (MWX) illustrates my conclusions. The MWX was a multi-year, multi-million dollar Department of Energy (DOE)-sponsored experimental study of the Mesaverde tight gas sands and has proven to be a wealth of both data and insight on the Mesaverde lithologies of the Piceance Basin.
Rock mechanics charts illustrate the results of the
elastic
analysis, showing the onset and opening tendency of fractures in rocks
over a spectrum of rock-mechanical properties and pore-pressure gradients. To
reveal how the Mesaverde lithologies may respond to subsurface conditions, rocks
from the MWX test wells are depicted on these charts, predicting that open
fractures will result from pore-pressure gradients in the 0.5 to 0.8 psi/ft
range.
Selected Figures
References
Law, B.E., and Johnson, R.C., 1989, Structural and stratigraphic fa=ramework of the Pinedale anticline, Wyoming, and the Multiwell Experiment site, Colorado: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1886, p. B1-B11.
Lorenz, J.C., A.R. Sattler, and C.L. Stein, 1989, The effects of depositional environment on petrophysical properties of Mesaverde reservoirs, northwestern Colorado, in Formation evaluation and reservoir geology, SPE Publ. No. 64, p. 119-132.
Spencer, C.W., 1989, Comparison of overpressuring at the Pinedale anticline area, Wyoming, and the Multiwell Experiment site, Colorado: US. Geological Survey Bulletin 1886, p. C1-C16.
Warpinski, N.R., and L.W. Teufel, 1989, Viscoelastic constitutive model for determining in-situ magnitudes from anelastic strain recovery of core: SPE Production Engineering, v. 4, no. 3, p. 272-280.
Yurewicz, D.A., 2005, Controls on gas and water distribution,
Mesaverde basin center gas play, Piceance Basin, Colorado (
extended
abstract):
Search and Discovery Article #90042 (2005) (http://www.searchanddiscovery.net/documents/abstracts/2005hedberg_vail/abstracts/
extended
/yurewicz/yurewicz.htm.
Yurewicz, D.A., K.M. Bohacs, J.D. Yeakel, and K. Kronmueller, 2003, Source rock analysis and hydrocarbon generation, Mesaverde Group and Mancos Shale, northern Piceance Basin, Colorado, in Peterson, K. M., Olson, T. M., and Anderson, D. S., eds., Piceance Basin 2003 Guidebook: Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists, p. 130-153.