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Texas Heat Flow Patterns*
Petru T. Negraru1, David Blackwell1, and Maria Richards1
Search and Discovery Article #80048 (2009)
Posted April 13, 2009
*Adapted from extended abstract prepared for AAPG Annual Convention, San Antonio, Texas, April 20-23, 2008
1 Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX ([email protected]; [email protected])
New heat flow data are combined with BHT data in Texas and surrounding areas to more accurately define the
thermal
field. The results are interpreted in terms of local and regional geology and tectonics. The variation in heat flow across Texas can be explained by a combination of three factors: changes in basement radiogenic heat production, heat generation within sedimentary rocks, and the local effect of possible groundwater flow. In south and east Texas, in spite of the moderate heat flow values, temperatures are quite high in the sedimentary section, and thus there is significant geothermal potential.
The
thermal
pattern in north-central Texas defines the Ouachita tectonic front as an important
thermal
boundary. Heat flow values increase eastward from 48 mW/m2 in the Fort Worth Basin to 61 mW/m2 in the Ouachita tectonic front. It drops to 55 mW/m2 in the interior zone to the east before increasing again to the interior of the Ouachita belt in Louisiana, probably due to a high radioactivity in the accreted basement rocks. In addition, a zone of heat flow values below 44 mW/m2 extends from approximately 30 km north of Dallas towards Oklahoma and is linked to the low heat flow values recorded in the deep Anadarko Basin and in the frontal part of the Wichita Uplift.
Heat flow data derived from high-resolution temperature logs are compared to the values obtained from conventional BHT. The BHT-derived heat flow values suggest that the low heat flow in the Fort Worth basin and north of Dallas are isolated features and that they are not linked to the similarly low heat flow in Midland and Delaware basins. We interpret the 51 mW/m2 values for the Palo Duro basin as a transition zone between low heat flow in the Midland Basin and higher heat flow immediately north of the Amarillo uplift north into Kansas.
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The study area described here extends from Palo Duro Basin in the west to the East Texas Basin, and a few kilometers into Louisiana. The area is interesting for several reasons. First it crosses the importantly economic Fort Worth Basin, where gas exploitation takes place from the Barnett Shale. In spite of the extensive drilling, Figure 1 shows the position of the new heat flow points on a structural map of southwestern U.S., while Table 1 shows the actual heat flow values. The techniques used to determine the heat flow values are described in detail in Negraru et al. (2008). Two wells are located in the Palo Duro Basin; two wells are located in the Fort Worth Basin; two are located in East Texas Basin close to Louisiana/Texas border: and 17 are wells of opportunity around the Ouachita Thrust Belt. With a few exceptions, most of the wells show values between 50 and 60 mW/m2. However, to determine basement heat flow, the radiogenic heat of the sediments must be removed from the surface heat flow values. Sediment heat generation tends to be ignored, but it may be significant. McKenna and Sharp (1998) published heat generation values for several Cenozoic units within the Gulf of Mexico and pointed out the importance of heat generation effects in basin modeling. Heat generation values for the sedimentary section were calculated from natural gamma radiation logs. The natural gamma radiation log records the total gamma radiation of the formations, and in spite of the fact that it does not provide the individual contributions of the radioactive isotopes, it is related to the total heat generation. Rybach (1986) developed a simple relationship between heat generation and gamma ray log intensity, which was later refined (Bucker and Rybach, 1996) to: A=0.0158(GR-0.8) where A is the heat generation value in µW/m3 and GR is the API value read on the natural gamma radiation log. Among sedimentary rocks shales have the higher heat generation values than sandstone and limestone, and black marine shales in East Texas have higher heat generation values than the Permian shales in West Texas. For instance the highest heat generation value for any of the wells is obtained for the Eagle Ford shale (2.2 µW/m3), whereas in Palo Duro Basin the Cisco shale has a heat generation value about half of this value (1.2 µW/m3). However, to have a significant contribution to the total heat flow the shale thickness need to be relatively large. The two wells in the Palo Duro Basin have surface heat flow values of 50 and 52 mW/m2. Apart from the Cisco shale, only the upper part of the wells, with a thin Cenozoic and Mesozoic section can have a significant contribution to the surface heat flow. The total contribution for those wells is around 2 mW/m2, which gives basement heat flow values of 48 and 50 mW/m2. In a previous paper (Herrin and Clark, 1956), heat flow values were published for the Midland and Delaware basins. The value of 44 mW/m2 is today the accepted heat flow value for this area. Up to now these were the only heat flow points west of the Ouachita fold belt. While the basement heat flow values for the Palo Duro Basin are within the error range of the Midland Basin values, the difference appears to be real. Farther to the north the heat flow increases gradually north of the Amarillo Uplift to 55 mW/m2 (Carter, 1993) in the Anadarko Basin.
The two wells in the Fort Worth basin have heat flow values of 48 mW/m2, but the sedimentary columns have an unusual high percentage of shales. Because of the unusual high shale content, the total contribution of the radiogenic heat to the surface heat flow is 4 mW/m2. If we remove this contribution from the surface heat flow, we obtain basement heat flow values of 44 mW/m2, similar to the value published for the Midland Basin (Herrin and Clark, 1956). This implies that the basement in Fort Worth basin is similar (at least from the The basement structure in north-central Texas is much more inhomogeneous. Surface heat flow values range from 41 mW/m2 to over 60 mW/m2. In spite of the presence of Eagle Ford Shale with very high heat generation, the overall heat generation for the whole sedimentary section can be neglected, as it is below 1 mW/m2. All the variation therefore appears to be related to structural changes in the basement.
Figure 2 shows a geologic section with corresponding heat flow values. The heat flow in the Fort Worth Basin is 48 mW/m2, whereas around the front of the Ouachita Belt there is an area with heat flow values that could be in excess of 60 mW/m2. Farther to the east (the interior zone of the Ouachita Belt), the heat flow drops to values generally below 60 mW/m2 but then increases significantly to the east. It appears, therefore, that the Ouachita belt is a major The easternmost heat flow points for this data set are located in Louisiana, a few kilometers from the border with Texas. They show high heat flow, in excess of 70 mW/m2. This implies the presence of very high heat flow from below the sediments. This area of high heat flow, which extends to the east as far as Mississippi, is one of the most attractive geothermal resource in the eastern U.S. (Blackwell et. al. 2007; Negraru et. al. 2008). The oil and gas infrastructure there could significantly lower the cost of the whole geothermal investment.
Implication for the
An interesting problem encountered in the Fort Worth Basin is understanding the
However, apatite fission track (AFT) studies on the Paleozoic Ouachita trend (Corrigan et al., 1998, and Winkler et al., 1999) give a different perspective. Fission tracks record the
The AFT data from basement rocks suggest similar
The gas-producing zones in the Barnett formation are closely associated with local
In any case the Late Paleozoic collision event that took place during final assembly of Pangea appears to have been energetic enough to drive the gas
The gas occurrences in localized Blackwell D., P. Negraru, and M. Richards, 2006, Assessment of the Enhanced Geothermal System Resource Base of the United States, Natural Resources Research, v. 15, no 4, 283-308. Bowker, K., 2003, Recent Development of the Barnett Shale Play, Forth Worth Basin: West Texas Geological Society Bulletin, v. 42, no. 6, p. 4-11. Bucker, C., and L. Rybach, 1996, A simple method to determine heat production from gamma logs: Marine and Petroleum Geology, v.13 (4), p. 373-375.
Carter, L. S., 1993, Heat flow and Corrigan, J., P.F. Cervany, R. Donelick, and S.C. Bergman, 1998, Post-orogenic denudation along the late Paleozoic Ouachita trend, south-central United States of America: Magnitude and timing constraints from apatite fission track data: Tectonics, v. 17, p. 587-6043. Gallagher, K., R. Brown, and C. Johnson, 1998, Fission track analysis and its applications to geological problems: Annu. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci., v. 26, p. 519-572. Gosnold, W. D., 1999, Basin scale groundwater flow and advective heat flow: An example from the northern Great Plains, in Geothermics in Basin Analysis, A. Forster and D. Merriam, ed.: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publisher, p. 99-116. Herrin, E.T., and S.P. Clark, Jr., 1956, Heat low in west Texas and eastern New Mexico: Geophysics, v. 21, no.4, p.1087-1099. McKenna, J., D.D. Blackwell, C. Moyes, and P.D. Patterson, 2005, Geothermal electric power supply possible from Gulf Coast: Midcontinent oilfield waters: Oil and Gas Journal, v. 103, no. 33, p. 34-40. McKenna, T.E., and J.E. Sharp, 1998, Radiogenic heat production in sedimentary rocks of the Gulf of Mexico Basin, South Texas: AAPG Bulletin, v. 82 (3), p. 484-96. Montgomery, S.L., D.M. Jarvie, K.A. Bowker, and R.M. Pollastro, 2005, Mississippian Barnett Shale, Fort Worth basin, north-central Texas: Gas-shale play with multi-trillion cubic foot potential: AAPG Bulletin, v. 89 (2), p. 155-175. Negraru, P.T, D.D. Blackwell, and K. Erkan 2008 Heat flow and geothermal potential in Southwestern United States, submitted to Natural Resources Research.
Rybach, L., 1986, Amount and significance of radioactive heat sources in sediments, in Collection Colloques et Seminares 44, Winkler, J.E., S.A. Kelley, S.C. Bergman, 1999, Cenozoic denudation of the Wichita Mountains, Oklahoma, and southern mid-continent: apatite fission-track thermochronology constraints: Tectonophysics, v. 305, p. 339-353.
Zhao H., 2004,
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