谷歌浏览器插件
订阅小程序
在清言上使用

Structural Control of Igneous Intrusions on Fluid Migration in Sedimentary Basins: the Case Study of Large Bitumen Seeps at Cerro Alquitrán and Cerro La Paloma, Northern Neuquén Basin, Argentina

Olivier Galland, Héctor J. Villar,José Mescua, Dougal A. Jerram,G. Messager, Adrian Medialdea,Ivar Midtkandal, J. Octavio Palma,Sverre Planke, Lars Eivind Augland, Alain Zanella

Special publication - Geological Society of London/Geological Society, London, special publications(2024)

引用 0|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
Cooling subvolcanic igneous intrusions are known to have a tremendous impact on fluid flow in the shallow Earth’s crust. However, the long-term post-cooling legacy of subvolcanic intrusions on fluid flow received much less attention. Here we describe geological examples in the Andean foothills, Argentina, showing that igneous intrusions have long-term effects on fluid flow after their emplacement and cooling. The case study consists of ∼11-million-year-old, eroded andesitic intrusions of Cerro Alquitrán and Cerro La Paloma, northern Neuquén Basin, Argentina, at the rims of which large volumes of bitumen are naturally seeping out at the Earth’s surface. The intrusions exhibit laccolithic shapes with steep-sided contacts with the host rock. Near the intrusive contacts, the andesite is intensely broken along concentric breccia bands and fracture bands, interpreted to result from syn-emplacement brittle magma deformation,which represent high-permeability pathways for the migrating bitumen. Organic geochemical analyses of the bitumen show that the seeping oils were generated from incipiently mature Vaca Muerta sections located in a regional kitchen to the west, implying a lateral migration of ∼10-20 km. The Cerro Alquitrán and Cerro La Paloma intrusions are demonstrative examples highlighting how extinct subvolcanic intrusions have long-term consequences on subsurface fluid circulations in sedimentary basins.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要