Past Seminars

Fault-controlled fluid flow within extensional basins and its implications for sedimentary rock-hosted mineral deposits

Details
  • Lecturer: Prof. John Walsh, Fault Analysis Group, iCRAG (Irish Centre for Research in Applied Geosciences), School of Earth Sciences, University College Dublin
  • Date: 18th November 2019; 10:00 h
  • Venue: Sala de Juntes de la Facultat de Ciències de la Terra (UB)
  • Further information: Gemma Alias Lopez (UB)

Abstract

Normal faults commonly represent one of the principal controls on the origin and formation of sedimentary rock-hosted mineral deposits. Their presence within rift basins has a profound effect on fluid flow, with their impact ranging from acting as barriers, causing pressure compartmentalization of basinal pore fluids, to formin conduits for up-fault fluid flow. Despite their established importance in controlling the migration and trapping of mineralizing fluids, we have yet to adequately reconcile this duality of flow behavior and its impact on mineral flow systems within basinal sequences from a semiquantitative to quantitative perspective. Combining insights and models derived from earthquake, hydrocarbon, and mineral studies, the principal processes and models for fault-related fluid flow within sedimentary basins are reviewed and a unified conceptual model defined for their role in mineral systems. We illustrate associated concepts with case studies from Irish-type Zn-Pb deposits, sedimentary rock-hosted Cu deposits, and active sedimentary basins. We show that faults can actively affect fluid flow by a variety of associated processes, including seismic pumping and pulsing, or can provide pathways for the upward flow of overpressured fluids or the downward sinking of heavy brines. Associated models support the generation of crustal-scale convective flow systems that underpin the formation of major mineral provinces and provide a basis for differences in the flow behavior of faults, depending on a variety of factors such as fault zone complexities, host-rock properties, deformation conditions, and pressure drives. Flow heterogeneity along faults provides a basis for the thoroughly 3D flow systems that localize fluid flow and lead to the formation of mineral deposits.

About the lecturer

Full professor at the School of Earth Sciences (University College Dublin). Director of the Science Foundation Ireland funded Irish Centre for Research in Applied Geosciences (iCRAG), Professor of Structural Geology in the School of Earth Sciences in UCD and Co-Director of the Fault Analysis Group in UCD. In 2017, he was awarded with the William Smith Medal of the Geological Society of London’s. The main areas of research of Prof. Walsh are: (i) Geometry and growth of faults systems. (ii) Earthquake characteristics of fault systems. (iii) Impact of faults and fractures on fluid flow on a range of scales (e.g. basin to mineral deposit). (iv) Numerical modelling of fault/fracture systems. (v) Economic aspects of faulting/ fracturing in the petroleum, mineral, coal and groundwater industries.

Further information

Fault-Controlled Fluid Flow Within Extensional Basins and Its Implications for Sedimentary Rock-Hosted Mineral Deposits (2017) John J. Walsh,, Koen Torremans, John Guven, Roisin Kyne,1 John Conneally, and Chris Bonson. Society of Economic Geologists, Inc. SEG Special Publications, no. 21, pp. 237–269 (chapter 11)

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