2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.apgeochem.2017.09.011
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The source and evolution of paleofluids responsible for secondary minerals in low-permeability Ordovician limestones of the Michigan Basin

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Cited by 17 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Numerical simulation of groundwater flow is an essential tool to synthesize hydrogeological information and reveal groundwater flow patterns (Bredehoeft and Konikow, 2012;Anderson et al, 2015;Tóth et al, 2016). The combination of these approaches is robust to reveal groundwater origin, flow regimes, renewability, hydrochemical evolution and interaquifer mixing, as well as surface water and groundwater interactions, etc., in basins with complex hydrogeology or sparse monitoring data, and has been successfully applied in many basins such as the Great Artesian Basin and Murray Basin in Australia, Michigan Basin in US, Minqin Basin and Ordos Plateau in China, Stampriet Basin in Africa (Edmunds et al, 2006;Banks et al, 2010;Love et al, 2013Love et al, , 2017Stone and Edmunds, 2014;Su et al, 2016;Cartwright and Morgenstern, 2017;Petts et al, 2017;Priestley et al, 2017b).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Numerical simulation of groundwater flow is an essential tool to synthesize hydrogeological information and reveal groundwater flow patterns (Bredehoeft and Konikow, 2012;Anderson et al, 2015;Tóth et al, 2016). The combination of these approaches is robust to reveal groundwater origin, flow regimes, renewability, hydrochemical evolution and interaquifer mixing, as well as surface water and groundwater interactions, etc., in basins with complex hydrogeology or sparse monitoring data, and has been successfully applied in many basins such as the Great Artesian Basin and Murray Basin in Australia, Michigan Basin in US, Minqin Basin and Ordos Plateau in China, Stampriet Basin in Africa (Edmunds et al, 2006;Banks et al, 2010;Love et al, 2013Love et al, , 2017Stone and Edmunds, 2014;Su et al, 2016;Cartwright and Morgenstern, 2017;Petts et al, 2017;Priestley et al, 2017b).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hobbs et al [114] suggested two geochemical systems present on a regional scale; a shallow system (<200 m) below ground surface containing fresh through brackish waters and an intermediate to deep (>200 m) system containing brines associated with hydrocarbon reservoirs. Petts et al [115] using microthermometric and isotopic data of secondary minerals in Cambrian and Ordovician strata suggested the presence of hydrothermal brines mixed with connate water. Al-Aasm and Crowe [2] in their investigations of dolomitization in the Cambrian and Ordovician carbonates in the Huron Domain identified two somewhat isolated digenetic fluid systems; an earlier Cambrian system and a later Ordovician system, both displaying unique geochemical attributes.…”
Section: Evolution and Origin Of The Diagenetic Fluidsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hobbs et al [114] suggested two geochemical systems present on a regional scale; a shallow system (<200 m) below ground surface containing fresh through brackish waters and an intermediate to deep (>200 m) system containing brines associated with hydrocarbon reservoirs. Petts et al [115] using microthermometric and isotopic data of secondary minerals in Cambrian and Ordovician strata suggested the presence of hydrothermal brines mixed with connate water. Al-Aasm and Crowe [2] in their investigations of dolomitization in the Cambrian and Ordovician carbonates in the Huron Domain identified two somewhat isolated digenetic fluid systems; an earlier Cambrian system and a later Ordovician system, both displaying unique geochemical attributes.…”
Section: Evolution and Origin Of The Diagenetic Fluidsmentioning
confidence: 99%