Abstract

Field characteristics, petrographic and geochemical signatures, as well as some petrophysical aspects of fault-related dolomite bodies in the Ranero area (Karrantza Valley, NW Spain) are presented in this paper. These dolomite bodies are hosted by Albian slope to platform carbonates, which were deposited in the Basque-Cantabrian Basin. Replacive and void-filling dolomite phases – postdating palaeo- and hypogene karstification – are interpreted to have originated from hydrothermal fluid pulses, and are spatially related with faults and fractures. Hydrothermal calcite cements pre- and postdate dolomitization. Mineralogical and geochemical investigations (XRD, ICP-MS/OES, XRF, stable and Sr isotopes) helped in distinguishing various dolomite and calcite phases. Dolomite phases can be grouped into ferroan (early) and non-ferroan (late). Dolomites are generally stoichiometric and exhibit a broad range of depleted δ 18 O values (–18.7 to –10.5‰ V-PDB), which advocate for multiphase dolomitization and/or recrystallization at relatively high temperatures (150-200°C). The observation that bed-parallel stylolites pre- and post-date dolomites suggests that dolomitization occurred during the Late Albian regional tectonic activity and related fluid expulsions. Based on carbonate chemistry, authigenic silicate chemistry and replacement relationships, two contrasting types of dolomitizing fluids are inferred. Both arguably may have initiated as sulphatedominated brines and/or basin compactional fluids, but they seemingly undergo sulphate reduction in contact with host rocks of contrasting compositions (Fe-rich silicate vs Fe-poor carbonate) thus evolving either to acidic and ferroan (limestone replacive) or to neutral, Fe-poor and sulfidic (Fe-dolomite replacive). Fluid drives are not well constrained by our data, but both fluid types are focused along major faults that cross cut the platform edge and are associated with diapir tectonics.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe Ranero area, and the Pozalagua Quarry (in the vicinity of the Ranero village, NW Spain), exposes unique fault-related High Temperature Dolomite (HTD) features

  • The Ranero area, and the Pozalagua Quarry, exposes unique fault-related High Temperature Dolomite (HTD) features

  • Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of this case study is that the first dolomitizing phase is a ferroan one (CCD-I), while the second is non-ferroan (CCD-II), both being precipitated at relatively high temperature as suggested by the very negative δ18O values and by fluid inclusion homogenization temperatures (LópezHorgue et al, 2010)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Ranero area, and the Pozalagua Quarry (in the vicinity of the Ranero village, NW Spain), exposes unique fault-related High Temperature Dolomite (HTD) features. In the Ranero area (part of the Ramales Platform), the occurrence of good outcrops of large HTD bodies allows a detailed multidisciplinary study of an outcrop analogue of this type of hydrocarbon reservoir rocks Such dolomites can be considered one of the best outcrop analogues of HTD that can serve to better understand the controlling factors on hydrothermal dolomitization, the morphology of dolomite lithosomes and porosity/permeability variations (e.g., López-Horgue et al, 2005, 2010; Caline et al, 2006; Sudrie et al, 2006; Schröder et al, 2008, Dewit et al, 2009, 2010), which are all matters of prime interest in oil and mineral resources exploration and production

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call