Abstract

The Kuqa Foreland Basin, adjacent to the southern Tianshan Mountains, is an important gas-producing basin in northwestern China. The development of the basin is dominated by a regional stress field with orientations of the maximum horizontal stress (SHmax) in the north-south direction, as a result of the collision between the Indian and Eurasian Plates. Previous studies have noted variations in the stress state in the Kuqa Foreland Basin; however, little attention has been paid to understanding the mechanisms causing such variations. In this study, a systematic analysis of in-situ SHmax orientations and fractures has been carried out using image logs from eight wells and XMAC/DSI logs from five wells. These wells are located in an East-West (E-W) trending fold-thrust in the foreland basin. The SHmax orientations (having quality ranked between A and D) obtained from borehole breakouts and drilling-induced fractures are highly variable and occur as two evidently different stress patterns on a scale of less than 10 km. The first stress pattern with SHmax orientations between NNW and NNE (165.08 and 188.59 °N) is broadly comparable to the regional stress field inferred from earthquake focal mechanism solutions in northwestern China from the World Stress Map (WSM). The stress pattern is interpreted to be controlled by plate boundary forces related to the collision between the Indian and Eurasian Plates. The SHmax orientations for the second stress pattern, however, ranging from NNE to ENE (26.65–57.77 °N), are clearly inconsistent with the regional stress filed and have been influenced by local geological factors. Faults and hinge-parallel fractures (trending in an approximately W-E direction) formed during the syn-folding stage probably resulted in heterogeneity of elastic properties and thus deflected SHmax orientations, both laterally and vertically, to generate the second stress pattern. The NE-striking hinge-oblique fractures are interpreted to have formed in response to the stress reorientation. Observations in this study suggest that there may exist a close relationship between fracturing (faulting) and stress variations, and pre-existing faults and fractures can influence subsequent fracturing by regulating local stress fields on a scale of several kilometers. The coupling between fracturing or faulting and stress produced fracture swarms, which can significantly enhance fluid flow and hence petroleum production.

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