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Multiple fluid flow events in the Cantabrian Zone, Northwest Spain*
By
J. Schneider1 and T. Bechstädt1
Search and Discovery Article # 30012 (2003)
*Online adaptation from extended abstract of presentation at AAPG Hedberg Conference, Deformation History, Fluid Flow Reconstruction and Reservoir Appraisal in Foreland Fold and Thrust Belts, May 14-18, 2002, Palermo – Mondello (Sicily, Italy).
1Geological-Paleontological Institute, University Heidelberg, INF 234, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany ([email protected])
The Cantabrian Zone in NW-Spain belongs to the foreland fold and thrust belt of the Variscan Orogen (Figure 1). It is composed of different units representing a Paleozoic shelf to basin transition, which was deformed during the Variscan Orogeny. The Cantabrian Zone is characterized by thin-skinned tectonics with a near absence of metamorphism and penetrative cleavage (Julivert, 1971, Perez-Estaún et al., 1988).
After the predominantly siliciclastic sedimentation during the Ordovician to
Silurian, the Lower Devonian La Vid Group marks a shift toward sediments
dominated by carbonates, which prevailed during the Devonian. The different
strata of the La Vid Group and the overlying formations have been tilted
vertically as a result of Variscan and Alpine deformation. The La Vid Group is
divided from base to top in dolostones, limestones, and the shales. This study
addresses the nature of multiple fluid flow events within the
Somiedo-Correcillas Unit by conducting a detailed investigation of the cement
stratigraphy
(Figure 2) in the La Vid Group. A combination of different
analytical methods, including petrographic observations, CL, SEM, XRD,
microthermometry,
stable
isotope
and trace element analyses were applied to
unravel the history of fluid-rock interaction.
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Petrographic observations and fluid inclusion
data revealed a cement
During the basin stage, barite (Bar) and
iron-rich saddle dolomite (S-Dol 1) was precipitated, cementing the
limestones and partly substituting LMC-shells. Bar and S-Dol 1 contain
fluorescing primary hydrocarbon inclusions which show in S-Dol 1
homogenization temperatures ranging from59°C
to 106°C.
The turbid and non-luminescing crystals of the saddle dolomite contain
also aqueous fluid inclusions with homogenization temperatures about 114°C.
This temperature gives the lower limit for the maximum temperature range
reached during burial diagenesis of the basin. The fluorescing
hydrocarbon inclusions indicate the upper limit of 140°C.
Hydrocarbon inclusions overprinted by a higher temperature would not
fluoresce. The second, major fluid event is characterized by the third saddle dolomite generation (S-Dol 3), which can be related to tectonic movements associated with brecciation of the host rock.
Dol 3 is restricted to veins and cavities in
the dolomite beds of the La Vid Group, showing clear crystals with
growth zones containing few low-salinity inclusions with methane as the
principal gas-phase. The
The most recent fluid flow event in the
Cantabrian Zone is characterized by Calcite 3 (Cal 3) and Celestite (Cel).
The calcite precipitated together with sulfate minerals in veins and
cavities along reactivated fault sytems. All-liquid inclusions along
growth zones in the clear, orange-luminescing calcite crystals indicate
a low temperature fluid, below 50°C.
The
This study identifies three different fluid events within the La Vid Group and the overlying carbonates, which can be related to different evolutionary stages of the Cantabrian Zone. The iron-rich saddle dolomite can be related to the basinal stage precipitated by compactional-driven flow in association with hydrocarbons generated from the Formigoso shales as the most probable source for the oil. The fluid passed through the ferruginous San Pedro sandstone, where iron was reduced by the hydrocarbon-rich fluids, and was transported upward through fractures cross-cutting the dolostones of the La Vid Group. In the overlying limestones, S-Dol 1 crystallized in porous fossil-rich beds, incorporating hydrocarbon inclusions. A pressure induced downward flow (Mann and Mackenzie, 1990) of the hydrocarbons can be excluded as other possible source rocks are absent in the overlying 500m of the Paleozoic succession. The maximum temperature reached during burial diagenesis lies between 114°C and 140°C. The subsequent temperature history did not exceed 140°C. S-Dol 3 belongs to a syn-Variscan fluid. Its syn-tectonic nature is indicated by brecciated fragments of the dolostones in fractures and cavities cemented by S-Dol 3. However, the flow direction of this fluid remains unconstrained. A large-scale fluid event is associated with Cal 3. It probably relates to tectonic movements of the Alpine deformation. Cal 3 occurs in fault zones and overprints the surrounding limestones with all its constituents. It brecciated, oxidized and dedolomitized S-Dol 1. In the vicinity of Cal 3-bearing fault systems, the oxidized S-Dol 1 (stippled arrow in Figure 3), the limestones (the straight arrow in Figure 3) and brachiopod shells analyzed by Ala (1996) show a depletion in d13C. The oxidation processes of the iron-rich S-Dol 1 reduced the O2-fugacity of the fluid, which caused an enrichment in d13C (Ohmoto, 1972) and a depletion in d18O. This is reflected by carbon isotopes of Cal 3 from different locations in the Cantabrian Zone showing an enrichment from very negative values in the north (Gaspanirri et al., 2001) to values around 0 in the south. This may confirm a North-South flowing fluid accompanied by an increase in iron, released due to the oxidation of the iron-rich saddle dolomite in the La Vid Group.
Ala, D., 1996, High resolution Gaspanirri, M., Bechstädt, T., and Boni, M., 2001, Large-scale hydrothermal dolomitization in the Southern Cantabrian Zone (NW Spain), in Cidu, R., ed., Water-Rock Interaction 2001, Volume 1: Villasimius, Sardegna, p. 165-168. Julivert, M. 1971, Decollement tectonics in the Hercynian Cordillera of Northwest Spain: American Journal of Science, v. 270, p. 1-29. Mann, D.M., and Mackenzie, A.S., 1990, Prediction of pore fluid pressures in sedimentary basins: Marine and Petroleum Geology, v. 7, p. 55-65. Ohmoto, H., 1972, Systematics of Sulfur and Carbon Isotopes in Hydrothermal Ore Deposits: Economic Geology and the Bulletin of the Society of Economic Geologists, v. 67, p. 551-578. Perez-Estaún, A., Bastida, F., Alonso, J.L., Marquinez, J., Aller, J., Alvarez, M.J., Marcos, A., Pulgar, J.A., Sitter, L.U.de, and Zwart, H.J., 1988, A thin-skinned tectonics model for an arcuate fold and thrust belt, the Cantabrian Zone (Variscan Ibero-Armorican Arc): Tectonics, v. 7, p. 517-537. Popp, B.N., T.F. Anderson, and P.A. Sandberg, 1986, Textural, elemental, and isotopic variations among constituents in Middle Devonian limestones, North America: Journal of Sedimentary Petrology, v. 56, p. 715-727. |
