Hydraulic conductivity of fractured upper crust: insights from hydraulic tests in boreholes and fluid-rock interaction in crystalline basement rocks

被引:62
作者
Stober, I. [1 ]
Bucher, K. [2 ]
机构
[1] Karlsruhe Inst Technol, Inst Appl Geosci, D-76131 Karlsruhe, Germany
[2] Univ Freiburg, Fribourg, Switzerland
关键词
brittle-ductile transition; deep well; hydrothermal; permeability; veins; well test; WELL-AQUIFER SYSTEMS; CONTINENTAL-CRUST; SOLUTE TRANSPORT; REACTION VEINS; FAULT ZONE; WATER; PERMEABILITY; FLOW; DEEP; TEMPERATURE;
D O I
10.1111/gfl.12104
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 permeability ([m(2)]) of fractured crystalline basement of the upper continental crust is an intrinsic property of a complex system of rocks and fractures that characterizes the flow properties of a representative volume of that system. Permeability decreases with depth. Permeability can be derived from hydraulic well test data in deep boreholes. Only a handful of such deep wells exist on a worldwide basis. Consequently, few data from hydraulically tested wells in crystalline basement are available to the depth of 4-5km. The permeability of upper crust varies over a very large range depending on the predominant rock type at the studied site and the geological history of the drilled crystalline basement. Hydraulic tests in deep boreholes in the continental crystalline basement revealed permeability () values ranging over nine log-units from 10(-21) to 10(-12)m(2). This large variance also decreases with depth, and at 4km depth, a characteristic value for the permeability is 10(-15)m(2). The permeability varies with time due to deformation-related changes of fracture aperture and fracture geometry and as a result of chemical reaction of flowing fluids with the solids exposed along the fractures. Dissolution and precipitation of minerals contribute to the variation of the permeability with time. The time dependence of is difficult to measure directly, and it has not been observed in hydraulic well tests. At depths below the deepest wells down to the brittle ductile transition zone, evidence of permeability variation with time can be found in surface exposures of rocks originally from this depth. Exposed hydrothermal reaction veins are very common in continental crustal rocks and witness fossil permeability and its variation with time. The transient evolution of permeability can be predicted from models using fictive and simple starting conditions. However, a geologically meaningful quantitative description of permeability variation with time in the deeper parts of the brittle continental crust resulting from combined fracturing and chemical reaction appears very difficult.
引用
收藏
页码:161 / 178
页数:18
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