Abstract

Fault zone geological and geometrical complexities are prime parameters playing a fundamental role in controlling the characteristics of both natural and induced seismicity. In the Bedretto tunnel (Switzerland), the Fault Activation and Earthquake Rupture (FEAR) project aims at triggering a Mw = 1 seismic event through fluid injection and stimulation of a natural fault zone situated in a large-scale (> 106 m3) fractured granite reservoir. The limited exposure of the fault zone in the tunnel, however, restricts the possibility to constrain in detail the geometrical and geological characteristics of the experimental target. Therefore, in order to constrain the geological and geometrical characteristics of the target fault zone, we have integrated structural analyses, borehole and core logging, and borehole ground penetrating radar (GPR). Preliminary field investigations in the tunnel allowed to identify the complex fault structure characteristics, fault rock properties, and slip tendency in the current stress field of the selected fault zone. These results were compared to the structural observations obtained from field surveys and remote sensing, constraining the slip history, and lateral extent of the set of natural fault zones occurring on the surface above the Bedretto tunnel. Indeed, the lateral extent of the selected fault has been confirmed through the logging (optical/acoustic televiewer, fracture intensity, fracture typology) of exploration boreholes and the analyses of the related cores. The comparison between the geological characteristics of fault zones in the cores and the characteristics of the selected fault zone exposed in the tunnel allowed to confirm the occurrence of the same typology of fault zone further away from the exposure in the tunnel. In addition, GPR logging of the exploratory boreholes provided fundamental insights on the lateral continuity of the identified fault zones on the tunnel wall, as well as those identified in the borehole/core logging. All geological and geometrical information have been integrated into a preliminary 3D geometrical model (in Leapfrog Geo), representing the overall geometry of the selected fault zone. This preliminary geometrical model has been validated against synthetic GPR profiles, computed through GPR forward modelling along the exploration boreholes. The integrated results define the selected fault zone as a 3-7 m wide zone of higher density (up to 5/m), of variably oriented secondary fractures, and bounded by two main slip surfaces. The slip surfaces are irregularly decorated by phyllosilicate-rich gouge patches, filling the roughness of the fault surface. The lateral extension of each discrete fracture does not exceed 30 m in length, but the overall lateral continuity of the fault zone exceeds several hundreds of meters. The presented integrated characterization approach allowed us to constrain a geologically-sound, first-order 3D geometrical model of a complex natural fault zone, validated against geophysical forward modelling. These preliminary results have fundamental implications for the expected experimental planning and outcomes, modelling and injection strategies, project logistics, as well as the design and deployment of the monitoring network around the stimulated fault zone.

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