Original paper
Impact of a regional fault zone on the properties of a deep geothermal carbonate reservoir unit (Devonian of NRW)
Pederson, Chelsea; Mueller, Mathias; Lippert, Kevin; Igbokwe, Onyedika Anthony; Riechelmann, Sylvia; Lersch, Sven; Benger, Peter; Verdecchia, Alessandro; Immenhauser, Adrian
Zeitschrift der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Geowissenschaften Band 172 Heft 3 (2021), p. 339 - 364
96 references
published: Dec 27, 2021
published online: Oct 28, 2021
manuscript accepted: Sep 7, 2021
final revised version received: Jul 23, 2021
manuscript revision requested: May 12, 2021
manuscript received: Feb 25, 2021
Open Access (paper may be downloaded free of charge)
Abstract
A multi-proxy field and laboratory study was conducted to investigate the impact of a regional fault zone on Devonian carbonate geothermal reservoir properties. The outcrop analogue chosen is exposed in the Steltenberg quarry (North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany) and provides access to Devonian lime- and dolostone units affected by branches of the Ennepe Thrust Fault zone. Data presented include (i) field evidence from sedimentological and structural data, (ii) petrographic and mineralogical analyses, and (iii) geochemical and petrophysical data. Although the interpretation of the depositional environment is not trivial, the carbonate facies present generally reflect the shedding of reefal material from large bioherms to the west of the study areas as well as localised, small bioherms prone to storm disintegration. The inherited properties of these carbonates at deposition, and a clear understanding of their diagenetic history, are the prerequisite for extrapolation between outcrop analogues and their corresponding subsurface units. We document a detailed interpretation of the paragenetic sequence that affected these rocks from deposition, burial, subsequent hydrothermal overprint related to rock disintegration and fluid circulation along the fault zone, and finally, late-stage meteoric overprint. Emphasis is placed on various forms of dolomitisation and its effect on rock properties and reservoir quality. The resulting scenario is complex, and when comparing the data from the Steltenberg quarry with nearby outcrops, significant regional heterogeneity is observed. It is important to separate between: (i) diffuse, locally distributed dolomitisation, (ii) replacive dolomitisation (fronts), spatially separating lime- and dolostones, and (iii) fault-bound, hydrothermal dolomitisation. The Devonian carbonates in the Steltenberg quarry examined here have higher thermal conductivity compared to the Jurassic (Malm) carbonate units in the Munich area, with some even higher than the values of massive limestone facies of the Munich area. As a large portion of North Rhine-Westphalia’s territory is underlain by Devonian carbonates, this is considered significant. However, emphasis is placed on the fact, that data shown here document the spatially complex organisation of rock types and their reservoir properties. This presents a warning against oversimplifications when extrapolating observations from outcrops into subsurface rock bodies.
Keywords
carbonates • geothermal • energy production • geochemistry • petrophysics • outcrop study • hydrothermal alteration