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Investigation of the thermal history of the Delaware Basin (West Texas, USA) using carbonate clumped isotope thermometry
Author(s) -
Naylor H. Nathan,
Defliese William F.,
Grossman Ethan L.,
Maupin Christopher R.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
basin research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.522
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1365-2117
pISSN - 0950-091X
DOI - 10.1111/bre.12419
Subject(s) - geothermal gradient , geology , dolomite , carbonate , geochemistry , structural basin , calcite , mineralogy , paleontology , chemistry , organic chemistry
Abstract We utilized carbonate clumped isotope thermometry to explore the thermal history of the Delaware Basin, West Texas, USA. Carbonate wellbore cuttings from five oil/gas wells across the basin yielded clumped isotope temperatures (T(Δ 47 )) ranging from 27°C to 307°C, interpreted to reflect a combination of initial precipitation/recrystallization temperature and solid‐state C‐O bond reordering during burial. Dolomite samples generally record lower apparent T(Δ 47 )s than calcite, reflecting greater resistance to reordering in dolomite. In all five wells, clumped isotope temperatures exceed modern downhole temperature measurements, indicating higher heat flow in the past. Using modelled burial curves based on sedimentological history, we created unique time‐temperature histories by linearly applying a geothermal gradient. Applying two different thermal history reordering models, we modelled the extent of solid‐state C–O bond reordering to iteratively find the time‐averaged best‐fit geothermal gradients for each of the five wells. Results of this modelling suggest that the shallower, southwestern portion of the study area experienced higher geothermal gradients throughout the sediment history (~45°C/km) than did the deeper, southeastern portion (~32°C/km), with the northern portion experiencing intermediate geothermal gradients (~35–38°C/km). This trend is in agreement with the observed gas/oil ratios of the Delaware Basin, increasing from east to west. Furthermore, our clumped isotope temperatures agree well with previously published vitrinite reflectance data, confirming previous observations and demonstrating the utility of carbonate clumped isotope thermometry to reconstruct basin thermal histories.