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Plumb et al. 1984
Plumb, R., Engelder, T. and Yale, D. (1984). Near-surface in Situ stress 3. Correlation with microcrack fabric within the New Hampshire granites. Journal of Geophysical Research 89. doi: 10.1029/JB080i011p09350. issn: 0148-0227.

We studied the correlation between near-surface in situ stress and the preferred orientation of microcracks at two quarries in the Milford granite and one quarry in the Conway granite, New Hampshire. The orientation of in situ stress was determined by overcoring doorstoppers and from the strike of induced borehole fractures produced by a pressurized packer. The preferred orientation of vertical microcracks was determined using ultrasonic measurements to determine P wave velocity Vp on core and in situ and from this section analyses. In suti Vp anisotropy was determined fro interborehole travel time data. At all three sites, directions of maximum compressive stress &sgr;1 and induced borehole fractures are aligned with the preferred orientation of open microcracks determined from core Vp and thin section data. An anlysis of the microcracking sequence within each pluton suggests (1) that the quarry grain resulted from cooling-induced thermal stresses and (2) a method of distiniguishing the paleostress axes at the time of cooling from contemporary stress.

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Journal of Geophysical Research
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