4.4 Article

Fracturing and fluid flow in a sub-decollement sandstone; or, a leak in the basement

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY
Volume 172, Issue 4, Pages 428-442

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC PUBL HOUSE
DOI: 10.1144/jgs2014-128

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Chemical Sciences, Geosciences and Biosciences Division, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Office of Science, US Department of Energy [DE-FG0203ER15430]
  2. GDL Foundation
  3. Fracture Research and Application Consortium
  4. Geology Foundation of the Jackson School of Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin

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Crack-seal texture within fracture cements in the Triassic El Alamar Formation, NE Mexico, shows that the fractures opened during precipitation of quartz cements; later, overlapping calcite cements further occluded pore space. Previous workers defined four systematic fracture sets, A (oldest) to D (youngest), with relative timing constrained by crosscutting relationships. Quartz fluid inclusion homogenization temperatures are higher within Set B (148 +/- 20 degrees C) than in Set C (105 +/- 12 degrees C). These data and previous burial history modelling are consistent with Set C forming during exhumation. Fluid inclusions in Set C quartz have higher salinity than those in Set B (22.9 v. 14.2wt% NaCl equivalent, respectively), and Set C quartz cement is more enriched in O-18 (20.2 v. 18.7 parts per thousand VSMOW). Under most assumptions about the true temperature during fracture opening, the burial duration, the amount of cement precipitated and fluid-flow patterns, it appears that the fracture fluid became depleted in O-18 and enriched in C-13. This isotopic evolution, combined with increasing salinity, suggests that throughout fracture opening there was a gravity-driven influx of fluid from upsection Jurassic evaporites, which form a regional decollement. Fracture opening amid downward fluid motion suggests that fracturing was driven by external stresses such as tectonic stretching or unloading, rather than increases in fluid pressure.

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