A Novel Technique
for Fracture Data Analysis Using Three-Dimensional Signal Processing and
Statistical Cluster Analysis: Outcrop Examples from the
Grand Canyon,
U.S.A. and
Gulf of Suez,
Egypt
Pigott, John D.1, Louis C. Niglio2,
Andy Rich3 (1)
University of
Oklahoma,
Norman,
OK (2) Minerals
Management Service,
New Orleans,
LA (3) Samson Investment Company,
Tulsa,
OK
Cluster analysis and signal processing techniques can
effectively discriminate clear signals from noise when applied to fracture
populations, i.e. delineate spatially and temporally discrete fracture
populations. Fracture analysis was performed in outcrop from 11 field stations
along the Gulf of
Suez margin,
Republic of
Egypt, and 29 stations within the
Grand Canyon. The data were separated into spatial
and temporal populations by 3D cluster analysis, transferred into the
frequency domain, 3D deconvolved, and analyzed
statistically both among and between stations.
For the
Gulf of Suez, three populations of para-coulombic
fracturing are apparent: a Mesozoic inherited northeast to west-northwest
coupled set, a Paleogene to Neogene
northnortheast coupled northwest set, and a Neogene northwest set. For the Grand Canyon, cluster
analysis indicates three dominate bi-modal fracture patterns and identifies
three dominating sets of NE, WNW, NW, and a weakly developed E-W set.
Analysis of paleostresses for the Gulf
of Suez appear to be related to specific tectonic events predating, coeval
with, and post-dating the crustal extension of the
Gulf of Suez with overprinting by the sinistral
opening of the Gulf of Aqaba. For the
Grand Canyon, NE and NW fracture sets appear related
to bending of cover rocks above crystalline basement trends while the WNW
fracture set may have formed under a post-Permian regional tectonic stress.
The 3D signal
processing and cluster analysis technique appears to be robust and to hold
great promise for the potential use of fracture mechanical stratigraphy
and interpreted paleostress analysis even in noisy
data.