Title:

Vectoring Into Potential Blind Geothermal Systems in Granite Springs Valley, Western Nevada: Application of the Play Fairway Analysis at Multiple Scales

Authors:

James E. FAULDS, Nicholas H. HINZ, Mark F. COOLBAUGH, Alan R. RAMELLI, Jonathan M. GLEN, Bridget AYLING, Philip E. WANNAMAKER, Stephen DEOREO, Drew L. SILER, and Jason W. CRAIG

Key Words:

geothermal exploration, Nevada, Granite Springs Valley, play fairway analysis, structural controls, direct evidence

Conference:

Stanford Geothermal Workshop

Year:

2019

Session:

Field Studies

Language:

English

Paper Number:

Faulds

File Size:

2239 KB

View File:

Abstract:

The Great Basin region of the western USA is capable of generating much greater amounts of geothermal energy than currently produced. Most geothermal resources in this region are blind, and thus the favorable characteristics for geothermal activity must be synthesized and methodologies developed to discover new commercial-grade systems. The geothermal play fairway concept involves integration of multiple parameters indicative of geothermal activity as a means of identifying promising areas for new development. In the Nevada play fairway project, nine geologic, geochemical, and geophysical parameters were initially synthesized to produce a new geothermal potential map of 96,000 km2. Granite Springs Valley in western Nevada is a particularly promising site selected for detailed study. It contains several favorable structural settings, including terminations of major Quaternary normal faults and fault intersections. Geologic, geophysical, and geochemical techniques were employed to define the most likely sites for high permeability and select drilling targets for temperature-gradient holes. Local and intermediate permeability models were revised to reflect results of detailed analyses and generate new detailed play fairway maps of the area. The most promising site lies in the northeastern part of the basin directly east of Adobe Flat, where the horse-tailing termination of a major normal fault (as revealed by new gravity data), opaline sinter deposits, warm shallow wells, and a low-resistivity anomaly are collocated. Geothermometry suggests a blind system with temperatures as high as ~130°C in this area. Four new temperature-gradient holes document temperatures of ~80°C at ~150 m depth. Lessons learned in the detailed studies of this project include: 1) initially identified sites commonly include multiple favorable settings at a finer scale; 2) promising sites in Cenozoic basins cannot be well defined without detailed geophysical surveys; and 3) play fairway analysis is critical at multiple scales, providing a means to select regional prospects as well as vectoring into drilling targets at individual sites.


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