堪萨斯州中南部、俄克拉何马州中北部和三州矿区热液流动时间控制

S. Mohammadi, A. Hollenbach, R. Goldstein, A. Möller, C. Burberry
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国中大陆南部古生代沉积岩受多种变形和流体流动事件的影响,形成了油气运移、热蚀变和密西西比河谷型成矿作用,具有复杂的成岩历史。这一记录是关于克拉通环境如何响应构造和非构造驱动因素的隐藏历史。这一贡献的目的是为了更好地了解古生代地层流体运移的控制因素,以评估热液活动是由构造作用还是非构造作用强迫的。本文对已发表的中大陆南部热事件数据的分布进行了总结和审查。此外,我们通过激光烧蚀-电感耦合等离子体质谱(LA-ICP-MS)对热液流体形成的方解石胶结物进行了新的U-Pb测年。这些是来自堪萨斯州萨姆纳县Berexco Wellington KGS 1-32岩心的三个样本;来自密苏里州颈城三州矿区的矿石样本;以及俄克拉荷马州奥塞奇县黑鸟4-33井的岩心样本。先前对这些方解石样本的研究提供了热液流体流动的证据,其中一个惠灵顿样本可能记录了垂直的热液流体从基底流出。来自密苏里州三州矿区的样品显示其中白垩纪年龄为115.6±3.1 Ma。这一时代处于西海岸塞维尔造山运动及其中陆前陆盆地发育时期。惠灵顿KGS 1-32岩心的密西期方解石产谱为305±10.5 Ma和305.1±9.1 Ma。黑鸟4-33岩心的密西系地层中方解石的年代为308.6±2.5 Ma。这些来自密西西比期方解石胶结物的数据表明,宾夕法尼亚晚期的热液流体流动与马拉松-瓦希托造山运动或祖先落基山脉造山运动的时间一致。来自Berexco Wellington KGS 1-32岩心的奥陶系Arbuckle组方解石样品的年龄为5.6±1.6 Ma,与落基山脉高海拔隆升已经非常超前的时期相吻合。我们认为,这种热液流体流动可能与地下含水层大气补给的增加和区域流体压力的增加有关,从而激活了远在大陆内部的局部地震事件。热液流动的年代分布证实了在瓦希托造山运动和古落基山脉造山运动期间的同构造驱动作用。热液流的延续进入二叠纪,在三叠纪早期逐渐减弱,这表明了一个后构造驱动因素,在三叠纪早期,隆升地区继续提供重力驱动流体流动的补给,直到山脉大部分被倾斜。三叠纪和侏罗纪热液事件的缺乏表明墨西哥湾的裂谷和伸展作用不那么重要。热液流动在白垩纪恢复并延续到古近纪,表明Sevier和Laramide事件的抬升和区域弯曲继续推动热液流动远离山地隆起和变形的主要部位。最后,与落基山脉最近隆起相关的热液流动可能是由补给事件激活的,这些补给事件对区域基底含水层施加了压力,引发了地震活动。
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Controls on Timing of Hydrothermal Fluid Flow in South-Central Kansas, North-Central Oklahoma, and the Tri-State Mineral District
Paleozoic sedimentary rocks in the southern midcontinent of the United States have been affected by multiple events of deformation and fluid flow, resulting in petroleum migration, thermal alteration, Mississippi Valley-type mineralization, and a complex diagenetic history. This record is a hidden history of how cratonal settings respond to tectonic and non-tectonic drivers. The aim of this contribution is to better understand the controls on fluid migration in Paleozoic strata to evaluate whether hydrothermal activity is forced by tectonic or non-tectonic processes.  This paper summarizes and vets the distribution of published dates related to thermal events in the southern midcontinent. In addition, we present new U-Pb dates obtained by laser ablation–inductively coupled plasma–mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) on calcite cements that were formed from hydrothermal fluids. These are from three samples from the Berexco Wellington KGS 1-32 core in Sumner County, Kansas; an ore sample from the Tri-State Mineral District, Neck City, Missouri; and a core sample from the Blackbird 4-33 well in Osage County, Oklahoma. Previous studies of these calcite samples provided evidence for hydrothermal fluid flow, with one of the Wellington samples possibly recording vertical hydrothermal fluid flow out of the basement.  The sample from the Tri-State Mineral District (Missouri) yields a mid-Cretaceous age of 115.6±3.1 Ma. This age falls into the timing of the Sevier Orogeny along the west coast and the development of its foreland basin in the midcontinent. Calcites from the Mississippian interval in the Wellington KGS 1-32 core yield dates of 305±10.5 Ma and 305.1±9.1 Ma. Calcite in Mississippian strata from the Blackbird 4-33 core yields a date of 308.6±2.5 Ma. These dates from Mississippian calcite cements indicate hydrothermal fluid flow in the Late Pennsylvanian that coincides with the timing of the Marathon-Ouachita Orogeny or the Ancestral Rocky Mountains Orogeny. A calcite sample from the Ordovician Arbuckle Group from the Berexco Wellington KGS 1-32 core yielded an age of 5.6±1.6 Ma, coinciding with a time after high elevation uplift of the Rocky Mountains was already far advanced. We propose that this hydrothermal fluid flow may have been associated with increased meteoric recharge and increased regional fluid pressure in a basement aquifer that activated local seismic events far into the continental interior.  The distribution of ages of hydrothermal fluid flow confirms a syntectonic driver during the Ouachita Orogeny and Ancestral Rocky Mountains Orogeny deformation. Continuation of hydrothermal fluid flow well into the Permian and tailing off early in the Triassic indicates a post-tectonic driver, where uplifted areas continued to provide the recharge from gravity-driven fluid flow, until the mountains were mostly beveled by the early part of the Triassic. A dearth of Triassic and Jurassic hydrothermal events suggests Gulf of Mexico rifting and extension were less important. Rejuvenation of hydrothermal fluid flow in the Cretaceous and continuing into the Paleogene indicates that elevation and regional flexure from both the Sevier and Laramide events continued to drive hydrothermal fluid flow far from the main sites of mountainous uplift and deformation. Finally, hydrothermal fluid flow associated with more recent uplift of the Rocky Mountains may have been activated by recharge events that pressurized a regional basement aquifer and triggered seismic activity.
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