Sill emplacement and contact metamorphism in a siliciclastic reservoir on Svalbard, Arctic Norway

Igneous intrusions in sedimentary basins are associated with contact aureoles that influence rock properties such as maturation, porosity and permeability. On Svalbard, an extensive dolerite complex (i.e., the Diabasodden Suite) was emplaced in a heterolithologic sandstone, siltstone, shale and carb...

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Main Authors: Senger K., Planke S., Polteau S., Ogata K., Svensen H.
Other Authors: Senger, K., Planke, S., Polteau, S., Ogata, K., Svensen, H.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11588/820235
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spelling ftunivnapoliiris:oai:www.iris.unina.it:11588/820235 2024-09-09T19:27:37+00:00 Sill emplacement and contact metamorphism in a siliciclastic reservoir on Svalbard, Arctic Norway Senger K. Planke S. Polteau S. Ogata K. Svensen H. Senger, K. Planke, S. Polteau, S. Ogata, K. Svensen, H. 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/11588/820235 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/WOS:000348339100005 volume:94 issue:2-3 firstpage:155 lastpage:169 numberofpages:15 journal:NORSK GEOLOGISK TIDSSKRIFT http://hdl.handle.net/11588/820235 info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-84921531977 info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2014 ftunivnapoliiris 2024-06-17T15:19:34Z Igneous intrusions in sedimentary basins are associated with contact aureoles that influence rock properties such as maturation, porosity and permeability. On Svalbard, an extensive dolerite complex (i.e., the Diabasodden Suite) was emplaced in a heterolithologic sandstone, siltstone, shale and carbonate succession during the Early Cretaceous (c. 124.5 Ma). The sedimentary host rocks include the predominantly siliciclastic, Upper TriassicMiddle Jurassic Kapp Toscana Group, which is currently being investigated as a storage unit for potential CO2 sequestration in the vicinity of Long yearbyen. As part of the baseline reservoir characterisation, a 2.28 metre-thick dolerite sill and its associated contact aureole was drilled and fully cored in the lower part of the target aquifer. Geochemical data indicate that the intrusion belongs to the Diabasodden Suite, which also crops out 18 km from the planned injection site. Samples spanning the contact aureole show significant thermal effects around the thin sill. The total organic carbon content is lowered towards the contact (from 1-2 wt.% to zero) accompanied by a reduction of the pyrolysis output and higher Tmax values (500°C vs. 320°C). A count of the visual fractures along the Dh4 borehole shows that the sill itself is characterised by a fracture frequency of 8-10 fractures per metre, well above the background fracturing in the host rock above the sill (0-1 fractures per metre). Increased background fracturing (4-10 fractures per metre) is, however, evident in the host rock below the sill. Our results show that the total aureole thickness is 160-195% of the sill thickness and that the sill and aureole together represent a six metre-thick geochemical and mechanical perturbation in the sedimentary succession. We conclude that even very thin sills and related aureoles may affect the CO2 storage aquifer by locally reducing porosity in the host rock, but also by enhancing permeability along the fractured intrusion-host rock interfaces. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Svalbard IRIS Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II Arctic Svalbard Norway Kapp Toscana ENVELOPE(15.075,15.075,77.553,77.553) Diabasodden ENVELOPE(16.132,16.132,78.357,78.357)
institution Open Polar
collection IRIS Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II
op_collection_id ftunivnapoliiris
language English
description Igneous intrusions in sedimentary basins are associated with contact aureoles that influence rock properties such as maturation, porosity and permeability. On Svalbard, an extensive dolerite complex (i.e., the Diabasodden Suite) was emplaced in a heterolithologic sandstone, siltstone, shale and carbonate succession during the Early Cretaceous (c. 124.5 Ma). The sedimentary host rocks include the predominantly siliciclastic, Upper TriassicMiddle Jurassic Kapp Toscana Group, which is currently being investigated as a storage unit for potential CO2 sequestration in the vicinity of Long yearbyen. As part of the baseline reservoir characterisation, a 2.28 metre-thick dolerite sill and its associated contact aureole was drilled and fully cored in the lower part of the target aquifer. Geochemical data indicate that the intrusion belongs to the Diabasodden Suite, which also crops out 18 km from the planned injection site. Samples spanning the contact aureole show significant thermal effects around the thin sill. The total organic carbon content is lowered towards the contact (from 1-2 wt.% to zero) accompanied by a reduction of the pyrolysis output and higher Tmax values (500°C vs. 320°C). A count of the visual fractures along the Dh4 borehole shows that the sill itself is characterised by a fracture frequency of 8-10 fractures per metre, well above the background fracturing in the host rock above the sill (0-1 fractures per metre). Increased background fracturing (4-10 fractures per metre) is, however, evident in the host rock below the sill. Our results show that the total aureole thickness is 160-195% of the sill thickness and that the sill and aureole together represent a six metre-thick geochemical and mechanical perturbation in the sedimentary succession. We conclude that even very thin sills and related aureoles may affect the CO2 storage aquifer by locally reducing porosity in the host rock, but also by enhancing permeability along the fractured intrusion-host rock interfaces.
author2 Senger, K.
Planke, S.
Polteau, S.
Ogata, K.
Svensen, H.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Senger K.
Planke S.
Polteau S.
Ogata K.
Svensen H.
spellingShingle Senger K.
Planke S.
Polteau S.
Ogata K.
Svensen H.
Sill emplacement and contact metamorphism in a siliciclastic reservoir on Svalbard, Arctic Norway
author_facet Senger K.
Planke S.
Polteau S.
Ogata K.
Svensen H.
author_sort Senger K.
title Sill emplacement and contact metamorphism in a siliciclastic reservoir on Svalbard, Arctic Norway
title_short Sill emplacement and contact metamorphism in a siliciclastic reservoir on Svalbard, Arctic Norway
title_full Sill emplacement and contact metamorphism in a siliciclastic reservoir on Svalbard, Arctic Norway
title_fullStr Sill emplacement and contact metamorphism in a siliciclastic reservoir on Svalbard, Arctic Norway
title_full_unstemmed Sill emplacement and contact metamorphism in a siliciclastic reservoir on Svalbard, Arctic Norway
title_sort sill emplacement and contact metamorphism in a siliciclastic reservoir on svalbard, arctic norway
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11588/820235
long_lat ENVELOPE(15.075,15.075,77.553,77.553)
ENVELOPE(16.132,16.132,78.357,78.357)
geographic Arctic
Svalbard
Norway
Kapp Toscana
Diabasodden
geographic_facet Arctic
Svalbard
Norway
Kapp Toscana
Diabasodden
genre Arctic
Svalbard
genre_facet Arctic
Svalbard
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/WOS:000348339100005
volume:94
issue:2-3
firstpage:155
lastpage:169
numberofpages:15
journal:NORSK GEOLOGISK TIDSSKRIFT
http://hdl.handle.net/11588/820235
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-84921531977
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