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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 107, NO. B12,
2340,
doi:10.1029/2001JB000488,
2002
Topographic stress perturbations in southern Davis Mountains, west Texas 2. Hydrogeologic implications
Roger H. Morin
U.S. Geological Survey,
Denver,
Colorado,
USA
William Z. Savage
U.S. Geological Survey,
Denver,
Colorado,
USA
Abstract
As part of a regional groundwater investigation, geophysical logs were obtained in two municipal water wells located near
the west Texas city of Alpine. These boreholes are 252 and 285 m deep and penetrate extrusive rocks of Tertiary age. The deeper
well was drilled in the central valley and the other along the northern flank of an east-west trending valley-ridge setting.
Analysis and interpretation of the logs reveal that the two wells are subjected to significantly different stress environments
because of topographic effects and exhibit significantly different hydrogeologic properties. Water production is associated
with two specific types of features common to both wells: (1) the upper and lower contacts of a dense trachyte unit located
in the shallow part of the wells and (2) deeper zones of highly fractured rocks within the interior of a basalt formation.
The transmissivity of the trachyte boundaries is twice as large in the central valley well as it is in the ridge flank well,
whereas the transmissivity of the deeper basalts is an order of magnitude greater in the flank well than it is in the central
well. This discrepancy is examined from the perspective of rock failure, fracture opening, and flow enhancement by computing
values for a Drucker-Prager stability factor that is based on the magnitudes of the normal and deviatoric stress invariants
as a function of depth. Thus the field measurements and subsequent stress analysis offer evidence of a coupled tectonic-hydrologic
interaction at this site.
Published 12
December
2002.
Index Terms: 1894 Hydrology: Instruments and techniques; 1829 Hydrology: Groundwater hydrology; 8168 Tectonophysics: Stresses—general; 8194 Tectonophysics: Instruments and techniques.
Read Full Article (file size: 507560 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Morin, R. H., and W. Z. Savage
(2002),
Topographic stress perturbations in southern Davis Mountains, west Texas 2. Hydrogeologic implications,
J. Geophys. Res.,
107(B12),
2340,
doi:10.1029/2001JB000488.
This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. Published in 2002 by the
American Geophysical Union.
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