“…At near isotropic stress conditions the fractures branch more strongly and without a preferred propagation direction, a phenomenom often referred to as high fracture complexity (e.g., Katsaga et al, 2015). During large-scale stimulations, there is a tendency for seismic clouds to develop perpendicular to the minimum principal stress direction σ 3 (Häring et al, 2008;Evans et al, 2005), particularly for HF operations (e.g., Rutledge et al, 2004), although for HS stimulations in crystalline rocks there are many examples in which the seismicity cloud is oblique to the σ 3 direction (e.g., Block et al, 2015;Murphy and Fehler, 1986;Pine and Batchelor, 1984), presumably reflecting the complex interplay between stress and the pre-existing fracture population that is suitably oriented for slip reactivation. Furthermore, individual seismicity clusters within the overall seismicity cloud often strike oblique to the maximum principal stress (Eaton and Caffagni, 2015;Deichmann et al, 2014).…”