APPLICATION OF CLAY-MINERAL, VITRINITE REFLECTANCE, AND FLUID INCLUSION STUDIES TO THE THERMAL AND BURIAL HISTORY OF THE PINEDALE ANTICLINE, GREEN RIVER BASIN, WYOMING

Author(s):  
RICHARD M. POLLASTRO ◽  
CHARLES E. BARKER
2016 ◽  
Vol 153 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 887-910 ◽  
Author(s):  
STEPHEN E. LAUBACH ◽  
ANDRÁS FALL ◽  
LAUREN K. COPLEY ◽  
RANDALL MARRETT ◽  
SCOTT J. WILKINS

AbstractFracture-hosted porosity and quartz distribution along with crack-seal texture and fluid inclusion assemblage sequences in isolated, bridging quartz deposits show that open fractures can persist through protracted burial and uplift in foreland basins. Fractures oriented at a high angle to current maximum compressive stress remain open and were weak mechanical discontinuities for millions of years even at great depth. Upper Cretaceous Frontier Formation sandstones in the basement-involved (Laramide) Table Rock anticline, eastern Greater Green River Basin, Wyoming sampled by two horizontal wells (cut parallel or nearly parallel to bedding and at a high angle to steeply dipping fractures) have 41.5 m of rock in four cores at depths of 4538–4547 m. Cores intersect older E-striking Set 1 fractures are abutted by or locally cross-cut by N-striking Set 2 fractures. Both sets contain quartz and porosity. Sequenced using quartz crack-seal cement texture maps, Set 1 fluid inclusion assemblage (FIA) trapping temperatures increase progressively from 140 to 165°C then decrease toc. 150°C, compatible with fracture opening overc. 15 Ma during rapid burial followed by uplift in Eocene–Oligocene time. Set 2 opened atc. 160°C, probably near maximum burial. After a period of quiescence, Set 2 reopened atc. 5 Ma atc. 140°C, on a cooling trajectory. Intermittent Set 2 movement could reflect local basement-involved fault movement, followed after a pause by further Set 2 reactivation in the modern stress field during uplift. Interpretations are sensitive to available burial/thermal histories, which have considerable uncertainty.


1994 ◽  
Vol 131 (4) ◽  
pp. 545-558 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Fitzgerald ◽  
M. Feely ◽  
J. D. Johnston ◽  
G. Clayton ◽  
L. J. Fitzgerald ◽  
...  

AbstractVitrinite reflectance data from Namurian rocks in west Clare suggest that high maturation levels, corresponding to palaeotemperatures of 340–370 °C, were attained prior to Variscan deformation. Fluid inclusions in syntectonic quartz veins homogenize between 330 °C and 50 °C with an accompanying decrease in salinity from 27 to 5 eq. wt % NaCl. Maximum fluid inclusion entrapment temperatures ranged from more than 300 °C to 250 °C during Variscan folding in County Clare. The observed maturation levels (c. 7.5% Rmax) far exceed values for simple burial maturation based on the estimated burial history and ‘normal’ geothermal gradients, and do not increase with depth in the Doonbeg No. 1 exploration well. Fluid advective heating is suggested as the most likely mechanism consistent with the Clare reflectance and thermometric data. Vein and shear zone dimensions preclude rapid vertical movements of hot fluids through the section, and extensive lateral fluid migration from sedimentary basins undergoing tectonically driven dewatering to the south or west is therefore proposed.


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