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Multi-disciplinary characterizations of the Bedretto Lab – a unique underground geoscience research facility

Authors :
Hannes Krietsch
Linus Villiger
Francisco Seberto
Domenico Giardini
Morteza Nejati
Marian Hertrich
Philipp Kästli
Hansruedi Maurer
Valentin Gischig
Rebecca Hochreutener
Anne Obermann
Raymi Castilla
Alba Zappone
Stefan Wiemer
Michèle Marti
Antonio Pio Rinaldi
Xiaodong Ma
Barbara Nägeli
Martin O. Saar
Thomas Driesner
Falko Bethmann
Kai Bröker
Quinn Wenning
Peter Meier
Alexis Shakas
Katrin Plenkers
Simon Löw
Nima Gholizadeh Doonechaly
Florian Amann
Source :
Solid Earth Discussions
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The increased interest in subsurface development (e.g., unconventional hydrocarbon, deep geothermal, waste disposal) and the associated (triggered or induced) seismicity calls for a better understanding of the hydro-seismo-mechanical coupling in fractured rock masses. Being able to bridge the knowledge gap between laboratory and reservoir scales, controllable meso-scale in situ experiments are deemed indispensable. In an effort to access and instrument rock masses of hectometer size, the Bedretto Underground Laboratory for Geosciences and Geoenergies (‘Bedretto Lab’) was established in 2018 in the existing Bedretto Tunnel (Ticino, Switzerland), with an average overburden of 1000 m. In this paper, we introduce the Bedretto Lab, its general setting and current status. Combined geological, geomechanical and geophysical methods were employed in a hectometer-scale rock mass explored by several boreholes to characterize the in situ conditions and internal structures of the rock volume. The rock volume features three distinct units, with the middle fault zone sandwiched by two relatively intact units. The middle fault zone unit appears to be a representative feature of the site, as similar structures repeat every several hundreds of meters along the tunnel. The lithological variations across the characterization boreholes manifest the complexity and heterogeneity of the rock volume, and are accompanied by compartmentalized hydrostructures and significant stress rotations. With this complexity, the characterized rock volume is considered characteristic of the heterogeneity that is typically encountered in subsurface exploration and development. The Bedretto Lab can adequately serve as a test-bed that allows for in-depth study of the hydro-seismo-mechanical response of fractured crystalline rock masses.<br />Solid Earth Discussions<br />ISSN:1869-9537

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18699537 and 18699529
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Solid Earth Discussions
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c91fc8e2b76371431559653714e5256b