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AAPG Bulletin

Abstract

AAPG Bulletin, V. 93, No. 7 (July 2009), P. 857889.

Copyright copy2009. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

DOI:10.1306/03230908032

Joint sets that enhance production from Middle and Upper Devonian gas shales of the Appalachian Basin

Terry Engelder,1 Gary G. Lash,1 Redescal S. Uzcategui1

1Department of Geosciences, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802; [email protected]
2Department of Geosciences, State University of New York, College at Fredonia, Fredonia, New York 14063
3Departamento de Ciencias de la Tierra, Simon Bolivar, Caracas, Venezuela; present address: Intevep, S.A., Apartado Postal 76343, Caracas 1070A, Venezuela

ABSTRACT

The marine Middle and Upper Devonian section of the Appalachian Basin includes several black shale units that carry two regional joint sets (J1 and J2 sets) as observed in outcrop, core, and borehole images. These joints formed close to or at peak burial depth as natural hydraulic fractures induced by abnormal fluid pressures generated during thermal maturation of organic matter. When present together, earlier J1 joints are crosscut by later J2 joints. In outcrops of black shale on the foreland (northwest) side of the Appalachian Basin, the east-northeast–trending J1 set is more closely spaced than the northwest-striking J2 set. However, J2 joints are far more pervasive throughout the exposed Devonian marine clastic section on both sides of the basin. By geological coincidence, the J1 set is nearly parallel the maximum compressive normal stress of the contemporary tectonic stress field (SHmax). Because the contemporary tectonic stress field favors the propagation of hydraulic fracture completions to the east-northeast, fracture stimulation from vertical wells intersects and drains J2 joints. Horizontal drilling and subsequent stimulation benefit from both joint sets. By drilling in the north-northwest–south-southeast directions, horizontal wells cross and drain J1 joints, whenever present. Then, staged hydraulic fracture stimulations, if necessary, run east-northeast (i.e., parallel to the J1 set) under the influence of the contemporary tectonic stress field thereby crosscutting and draining J2 joints.

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