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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: The Structure, Content, and Growth of Fault Zones Within
Sedimentary Sequences and Their Effects on Hydrocarbon Flow
Fault Analysis Group,
School of Geological Sciences,
University College
Dublin, Ireland
Existing models for the growth of fault zones associated with
normal faulting of sedimentary sequences range from
conceptual models for fault zone architecture, incorporating
components such as fault core and damage zone, through to a
variety of fault wear models that attempt to explain established
quantitative correlations between fault displacement and fault
rock
thickness. Despite the importance of normal faults in a variety
of application areas, no unified model for fault zone evolution
has been developed which incorporates the broad range of
fault-related features and processes. Exploring links between the
scaling of different fault zone components and fault displacement,
this talk presents a quantitative model for fault zone evolution
which attempts to reconcile fault zone structure with the repetitive
operation of a small number of processes, including fault
segmentation and refraction, and asperity removal. This model
helps to reconcile the main characteristics of fault zones developed
within a broad range of host
rock
sequences and at different
deformation conditions, but still recognizes the inherent
complexities of natural fault zones.
This model for fault zone structure is also consistent with recent
studies of high-
quality
outcrops which illustrate how the combined
effect of host-
rock
rheology and prevailing deformation processes
is capable of generating the full range of fault
rock
types, including
those which have a major impact on hydrocarbon flow, such as
shale/clay smears within poorly consolidated sediments through
to shaley fault gouges within lithified sediments. The incorporation
of either shale smears or shaley gouge within fault zones
contained in siliciclastic sequences is now recognized as one of
the principal means of forming some fault-bounded traps and
can have a major impact on intra-reservoir flow. Existing empirical
constraints demonstrate that fault
rock
permeabilities decrease
with increasing clay fraction and provide a means of predicting
fault
rock
permeabilities in the subsurface. New approaches are
briefly described which are capable of incorporating the flow
effects of faults in both hydrocarbon exploration and production
models. Recently published studies show that these methods
provide an improved basis for modelling faults contained within
reservoir production or hydrocarbon migration flow models of
siliciclastic sequences, in which faults behave as barriers or baffles
to flow.
Faults are represented as planes in conventional reservoir cellular models and yet they
contain fault rocks with permeabilities that differ from those of the host
rock
.
From Manzocchi et al. (1999). Petroleum Geoscience, 5, 53-63.
Faults in a reservoir model in which across-fault sequence juxtaposition is explicitly included
in the model geometry, with fault
rock
properties represented by cross-fault transmissibility
multipliers on the cell faces along the fault surface (using the method of Manzocchi et al. 1999).