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Buchkapitel

Lava flow-hosted reservoirs: a review

Urheber*innen

Millett,  John M.
External Organizations;

Rossetti,  Lucas
External Organizations;

Bischoff,  Alan
External Organizations;

Rossetti,  Marcos
External Organizations;

Rosenqvist,  Marija P.
External Organizations;

Avseth,  Per
External Organizations;

Hole,  Malcolm J.
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/pierdo

Pierdominici,  S.
4.2 Geomechanics and Scientific Drilling, 4.0 Geosystems, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

Healy,  Dave
External Organizations;

Jerram,  Dougal A.
External Organizations;

Planke,  Sverre
External Organizations;

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Zitation

Millett, J. M., Rossetti, L., Bischoff, A., Rossetti, M., Rosenqvist, M. P., Avseth, P., Hole, M. J., Pierdominici, S., Healy, D., Jerram, D. A., Planke, S. (2024): Lava flow-hosted reservoirs: a review. - In: Kilhams, B., Holford, S., Gardiner, D., Gozzard, S., Layfield, L., McLean, C., Thackrey, S., Watson, D. (Eds.), The Impacts of Igneous Systems on Sedimentary Basins and their Energy Resources, (Geological Society special publication ; 547), London : The Geological Society.
https://doi.org/10.1144/SP547-2023-102


Zitierlink: https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_5025298
Zusammenfassung
Lava flows form important fluid reservoirs and have been extensively exploited for water aquifers, geothermal energy, hydrocarbon production and, more recently, for carbon storage. Effusive subaerial mafic to intermediate lava flows account for vast rock volumes globally, and form reservoirs with properties dictated by well-known lava flow facies ranging from pāhoehoe through several transitional forms to ‘a’ā lava. These variations in flow type lead to critical differences in the pore structure, distribution, connectivity, strength and fracturing of individual lava flows, which, alongside lava flow package architectures, determine primary reservoir potential. Lava flow margins with vesicular, fracture and often autobreccia-hosted pore structures can have porosities commonly exceeding 40% and matrix permeabilities over 10−11 m2 (>10 D) separated by much lower porosity and permeability flow interiors. Secondary post-emplacement physicochemical changes related to fracturing, meteoric, diagenetic and hydrothermal alteration can significantly modify reservoir potential through a complex interplay of mineral transformation, pore-clogging secondary minerals and dissolution, which must be carefully characterized and assessed during exploration and appraisal. Within this contribution, a review of selected global lava flow-hosted reservoir occurrences is presented, followed by a discussion of the factors that influence lava flow reservoir potential.