Detailed Fluid Inclusion and Stable Isotope Analysis on Deep Carbonates from the North Alpine Foreland Basin to Constrain Paleofluid Evolution

被引:9
|
作者
Mraz, Elena [1 ]
Wolfgramm, Markus [2 ]
Moeck, Inga [3 ]
Thuro, Kurosch [1 ]
机构
[1] Tech Univ Munich, Arcisstr 21, D-80333 Munich, Germany
[2] Geothermie Neubrandenburg GmbH, Seestr 7A, D-17033 Neubrandenburg, Germany
[3] Leibniz Inst Appl Geophys, Stilleweg 2, D-30655 Hannover, Germany
关键词
MOLASSE BASIN;
D O I
10.1155/2019/8980794
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
The recent interest on environmentally friendly energy resources has increased the economic interest on the Upper Jurassic carbonate rocks in the North Alpine Foreland Basin, which serves as a hydrogeothermal reservoir. An economic reservoir use by geothermal fluid extraction and injection requires a decent understanding of porosity-permeability evolution of the deep laying Upper Jurassic strata at depths greater than 2000m. The analysis of paleofluids caught in cements of the rock mass helps to determine the postdepositional reservoir evolution and fluid migration. Therefore, the high- and low-permeability areas of the Upper Jurassic in the North Alpine Foreland Basin referred to as Molasse Basin were analyzed by means of encountered postdepositional cements to determine the reservoir evolution. The cements were sampled at different hydrocarbon and geothermal wells, as well as at outcrops in the Franconian and Swabian Alb. To determine the composition and temperature of the paleofluids, fluid inclusions and cements of the Upper Jurassic carbonate rocks were analyzed by microthermometry and stable isotope measurements. Since drill cuttings are a rather available sample material compared to drill cores, a new microthermometry measurement method was achieved for the around 1mm drill cuttings. Salinity and formation temperature of paleofluids in fluid inclusions and isotope data are consistent with previous studies and reveal a 5-stage evolution: the main cementation phases are composed of (I) the early diagenesis in limestones (200-400m, 40-50 degrees C), (II) early diagenetic dolomitization, and (III) burial dolomitization (1-2km, II: 40-90 degrees C; III: 70-100 degrees C; 40g/L NaCl equiv.), and (IV) late burial calcification (IIIa: 110-140 degrees C, IIIb: 140-200 degrees C) linked to tectonic features in the Molasse Basin. In the outcrop samples, a subsequent (V) cementation phase was determined controlled by karstification. In the southwest, an increase in salinity of the fluid inclusions in vein calcites, above the salinity of the Jurassic seawater, highlights the influence of basin fluids (diagenetic, evaporitic). In the other eastern wells, vein calcites have precipitated from a low saline fluid of around 10-20g/L NaCl equiv. The low salinity and the isotope values support the theory of a continuous influence of descending meteoric fluids. Consequently, the Upper Jurassic seawater has been diluted by a meteoric fluid to a low saline fluid (<1g/L), especially in areas with high permeability. Here, we show how a better understanding of cementation trajectory at depth can help to generate a better understanding of geothermal usability in deep carbonate reservoirs.
引用
收藏
页数:23
相关论文
共 38 条
  • [31] The source and evolution of ore fluids in the Heiniuwa gold deposit, Baoshan block, Sanjiang region: Constraints from sulfide trace element, fluid inclusion and stable isotope studies
    Chen, Fuchuan
    Deng, Jun
    Wang, Qingfei
    Li, Gongjian
    Shu, Qihai
    Yang, Chunhai
    Liu, Jinyu
    Xu, Rong
    ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS, 2018, 95 : 725 - 745
  • [32] Growth increments and stable isotope variation in shells of the deep-sea hydrothermal vent bivalve mollusk Bathymodiolus brevior from the North Fiji Basin, Pacific Ocean
    Schöne, BR
    Giere, O
    DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART I-OCEANOGRAPHIC RESEARCH PAPERS, 2005, 52 (10) : 1896 - 1910
  • [33] Stable Isotope Analysis of Mammalian Enamel From the Early Pleistocene Site of Madigou, Nihewan Basin: Implications for Reconstructing Hominin Paleoenvironmental Adaptations in North China
    Xu, Zhe
    Pei, Shuwen
    Hu, Yaowu
    de la Torre, Ignacio
    Ma, Dongdong
    FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE, 2021, 9
  • [34] Genesis and evolution of the structurally controlled vein mineralization (Sb-Hg) in the Escarlati deposit (Leon, Spain): Evidence from fault population analysis methods, fluid-inclusion research and stable isotope data
    Martin-Izard, A.
    Gumiel, P.
    Arias, M.
    Cepedal, A.
    Fuertes-Fuente, M.
    Reguilon, R.
    JOURNAL OF GEOCHEMICAL EXPLORATION, 2009, 100 (01) : 51 - 66
  • [35] RETRACTION: Predictability and controlling factors of overpressure in the North Alpine Foreland Basin, SE Germany: an interdisciplinary post-drill analysis of the Geretsried GEN-1 deep geothermal well (Retraction of Vol 7, art no 3, 2019)
    Drews, Michael C.
    Hofstetter, Peter
    Zosseder, Kai
    Straubinger, Robert
    Gahr, Andreas
    Stollhofen, Harald
    GEOTHERMAL ENERGY, 2020, 8 (01)
  • [36] Pleistocene paleoenvironmental evolution at continental middle latitude inferred from carbon and oxygen stable isotope analysis of ostracodes from the Guadix-Baza Basin (Granada, SE Spain)
    Ortiz, Jose E.
    Torres, Trinidad
    Delgado, Antonio
    Reyes, Emilio
    Llamas, Juan F.
    Soler, Vicente
    Raya, Jorge
    PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY, 2006, 240 (3-4) : 536 - 561
  • [37] STABLE ISOTOPE, PETROLOGICAL, AND FLUID INCLUSION STUDIES OF MINOR MINERAL-DEPOSITS FROM THE MCARTHUR BASIN - IMPLICATIONS FOR THE GENESIS OF SOME SEDIMENT-HOSTED BASE-METAL MINERALIZATION FROM THE NORTHERN-TERRITORY
    MUIR, MD
    DONNELLY, TH
    WILKINS, RWT
    ARMSTRONG, KJ
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 1985, 32 (03) : 239 - 260
  • [38] Compound-specific stable carbon isotope analysis as a tool for correlating coal-sourced oils and interbedded shale-sourced oils in coal measures: an example from Turpan basin, north-western China
    Sun, YG
    Sheng, GY
    Peng, P
    Fu, JM
    ORGANIC GEOCHEMISTRY, 2000, 31 (12) : 1349 - 1362