Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1753028 International Journal of Coal Geology 2014 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
The cleats' mean orientations are NE-SW and NW-SE, dipping at a high angle > 75°. The first set of fractures refers to the face cleats and the second one to the butt cleats. The spacing of face cleats is from 10.0 to 17.2 cm (averaging 12.65 cm) and the spacing of butt cleats is from 9.3 to 24.3 cm (averaging 13.75 cm). On the other hand, aperture measurements of these cleats range from 0.2 to 1.9 cm (averaging 0.68 cm) and from 0.1 to 1.5 cm (averaging 0.42 cm), respectively. The obtained results clearly indicate that face cleat orientations (NW-SE) are strictly parallel to the elongation of the main tectonic structures in the study area. Their origin may be explained in at least two ways, that is, by tectonic folding (the maximum principal stress, σ1, was horizontal) or by salt diapirism (the maximum principal stress, σ1, was vertical). In both cases the intermediate principal stress, σ2, was parallel to the face cleat strikes, namely NW-SE, although the well-developed butt cleats, in the context of regional geology, provide additional evidence for the creation of an orthogonal system of fractures (cleats) in the cover of salt structures. Thus, the NW-SE direction is characteristic of both the extent of the main tectonic units in central Poland and the face cleat orientation in MPLS-1.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Economic Geology
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