Facies architecture, geochemistry and palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of a barrage tufa reservoir analog (Betic Cordillera, S. Spain)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Pla Pueyo, Sila; Viseras Alarcón, César; Henares Ladrón de Guevara, Saturnina; Yeste Pérez, Luis MiguelEditorial
Elsevier
Fecha
2017Referencia bibliográfica
Pla-Pueyo, S., Viseras, C., Henares-Ladrón de Guevara, S., Yeste-Pérez, L.M. 2017. Facies architecture, geochemistry and palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of a barrage tufa reservoir analog (Betic Cordillera, S. Spain). Quaternary International, 437, 15-36. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2016.05.022
Resumen
Continental carbonates are currently of high interest for the oil and gas industry, as they have proved to
be good reservoir rocks in Brazil and Angola offshore oil elds. In this article, a tufa system in which
continental carbonates formed mainly in the Pliocene (Rambla Becerra Tufa System, Guadix Basin, Betic
Cordillera, S. Spain), is described in detail, and a model proposed for its formation and evolution through
time. Several stages of tufa growth have been identied in the eld, intercalated between stages of
progradation of alluvial fan sediments. The tufa system connects laterally with the uvial system
developed in the axial valley of the Guadix Basin during the Pliocene and the Pleistocene, indicating that
the tufa formation was coetaneous with the periods of lateral expansion of the uvial system oodplain,
that in previous works have been interpreted as more humid stages and potentially warmer. The absence
of extraclasts in the tufa sediments points to the low activity of the alluvial fans during the tufa formation
and therefore supports the idea that the main tufa growth happened during more humid stages, and the
alluvial fans developed further during the more arid periods, which is consistent with other recent
ndings in the Guadix Basin. The tufa growth is represented by four main stages, the second one bearing
the best example to study as a potential reservoir analog, as the main outcrop is a discrete body with a
specic geometry and facies distribution. This main outcrop is a mound-shaped tufa build-up formed by
prograding sigmoids of clastic tufa, interpreted as the ramp-like buttresses developed after a barrage in a
barrage tufa system. From a preliminary isotopic study of the carbonates forming the barrage tufa system
and by comparison with other tufas and travertines, the oxygen and carbon stable isotopes point to an
intermediate situation between a palustrine tufa and a travertine. This information, when added to the
sedimentological data, supports the idea that water feeding the tufa system probably had different
sources: a meteoric one, coinciding with the surface runoff and a groundwater one, probably in the form
of springs fed by groundwater from the nearby aquifers that still exist in the Mesozoic carbonates that
form the External Zones of the Betic Cordillera in the area.





