Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Spatial analysis of extension fracture systems: A process modeling approach

January 1, 1985

Little consensus exists on how best to analyze natural fracture spacings and their sequences. Field measurements and analyses published in geotechnical literature imply fracture processes radically different from those assumed by theoretical structural geologists. The approach adopted in this paper recognizes that disruption of rock layers by layer-parallel extension results in two spacing distributions, one representing layer-fragment lengths and another separation distances between fragments. These two distributions and their sequences reflect mechanics and history of fracture and separation. Such distributions and sequences, represented by a 2 ?? n matrix of lengthsL, can be analyzed using a method that is history sensitive and which yields also a scalar estimate of bulk extension, e (L). The method is illustrated by a series of Monte Carlo experiments representing a variety of fracture-and-separation processes, each with distinct implications for extension history. Resulting distributions of e (L)are process-specific, suggesting that the inverse problem of deducing fracture-and-separation history from final structure may be tractable. ?? 1985 Plenum Publishing Corporation.

Publication Year 1985
Title Spatial analysis of extension fracture systems: A process modeling approach
DOI 10.1007/BF01032930
Authors C.C. Ferguson
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of the International Association for Mathematical Geology
Index ID 70012759
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse