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Origin and evolution of formation waters, Alberta Basin, Western Canada Sedimentary Basin. II. Isotope systematics and water mixing

Isotopic measurements (Sr, O, D) on formation waters from the Alberta Basin have been made, covering a stratigraphic range from Devonian to Upper Cretaceous. These measurements, combined with chemical compositional trends, give evidence for two distinct water regimes. One hydrological regime is comp...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Applied geochemistry 1990-07, Vol.5 (4), p.397-413
Main Authors: Connolly, Cathy A., Walter, Lynn M., Baadsgaard, H., Longstaffe, Fred J.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Isotopic measurements (Sr, O, D) on formation waters from the Alberta Basin have been made, covering a stratigraphic range from Devonian to Upper Cretaceous. These measurements, combined with chemical compositional trends, give evidence for two distinct water regimes. One hydrological regime is composed of waters hosted in Devonian-Lower Cretaceous reservoirs, the other waters from Upper Cretaceous and younger sedimentary rocks. The two regimes are separated by a regional transgressive shale in the Colorado Group, the Second White Speckled Shale Formation. The waters within the Devonian-Lower Cretaceous regime exhibit a large range in 87Sr/ 86Sr values (0.7076–0.7129), but have similar Sr concentrations, regardless of host lithology. Bulk rock and late-stage diagenetic cements are less radiogenic than present brines. Importantly, brines from Devonian carbonates possess the most radiogenic Sr isotopic signatures of the waters examined. Devonian shales and/or Cambrian shales may be sources of high 87Sr/ 86Sr ratios in the carbonate-hosted waters. Waters from the Upper Cretaceous clastic units, which have ratios as low as 0.7058, and diagenetic cements from Upper Cretaceous clastic units appear to have precipitated from fluids similar in Sr isotopic value to modern brines. High Sr concentrations in the Cretaceous clastic waters and sedimentary rocks and correspondingly low 87Sr/ 86Sr ratios suggest that volcanism in Montana during the Cretaceous may have provided a source of sediments to the study area. Cross-formational upward water migration, superimposed on lateral fluid flow, is required to explain the geochemistry and isotopic systematics in the brines from Devonian-Lower Cretaceous reservoirs. Strontium isotope ratios and Sr contents suggest a two component mixing relation for these waters. This system of waters also exhibits δD values characteristic of meteoric values in the Neogene, reflecting post-Laramide flushing of Tertiary waters throughout the basin, with subsequent hydrochemical isolation from more modern waters. In contrast, waters in Upper Cretaceous reservoirs have O and D isotopic compositions similar to those of present day rainfall; these, in conjunction with very dilute Sr concentrations and low Sr ratios, suggest hydrological isolation from the stratigraphically lower system.
ISSN:0883-2927
1872-9134
DOI:10.1016/0883-2927(90)90017-Y