Groundwater Exploration in Carbonate Reservoirs Using Borehole Investigations: A Case Study from South Dobrogea, Romania
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Geological and Tectonic Setting
- (1)
- Quaternary—Holocene–Pleistocene loessoid deposits with paleosoils intercalations, which unconformably cover the Cretaceous formations. Usually, a 2–3 m thick level of reddish shales and reworked gravels (early Pleistocene) is present at the base of these loessoid deposits. The thickness of the Quaternary deposits ranges from 10 to 45 m.
- (2)
- Gherghina Formation—Middle–Late Aptian [30,31]. Continental fluvial–lacustrine deposits of 5–30 m thickness, consisting of polychrome kaolinitic shales with calcareous concretions in the upper part and sands, gravels, and conglomerates with a reddish shaly or silty matrix at the base of the unit. The continental deposits may change laterally and/or vertically into shallow marine facies with marlstones, siltstones, and sandstones with marly intercalations.
- (3)
- Cernavodă Formation—late Berriasian–Valanginian [30,31,32,33]. A shallow marine calcareous unit of 20–40 m thickness, discordantly overlaid by the Gherghina Formation and separated into two subunits in the study area: (a) the Aliman Member (Valanginian) at the upper part, unconformable and transgressive, consisting of calcirudites and calcarenites with numerous macro– and microfossils and intercalations of algal stromatolites; (b) the Hinog Member (late Berriasian) at the base, comprising conglomerates, sandy shales, argillaceous limestones, oolitic limestones, and biostromes, with gastropod fauna.
- (4)
- Amara Formation—Late Jurassic (late Tithonian)–Early Cretaceous (early–middle Berriasian) [31,33]. This unit of over 300 m thickness includes siliciclastic, carbonate, and evaporitic deposits and comprises two subunits in the study area: (a) the Zăvoaia Member (early–middle Berriasian) at the upper part, consisting of a 40–60 m thickness sequence of polychrome (reddish-violet, greenish) shales, marlstones, and oolitic and micritic limestones, overlying a marine carbonate sequence of up to 50–60 m thickness, which includes bioclastic limestones, detrital limestones, oolitic limestones, and calcareous sandstones, with intercalations of marlstones and argillaceous limestones. The rich fossil microfauna and microflora collected from the upper part of the Zăvoaia Member indicates a deposition in a continental–lacustrine and lagoonal, even littoral, environment and allowed a parallelization with the Purbeckian facies; (b) the Cireșu Member, representing an evaporitic sequence of 180–200 m thickness, consisting of massive gypsum and anhydrite, with intercalations of gypsiferous shales and marlstones, oolites, and micritic limestones of variable thicknesses. Secondary gypsum frequently appears deposited in the fissures or the bedding planes of the argillaceous rocks, and the gypsiferous shales adjacent to massive gypsum intervals show microfolds related to the hydration of anhydrite. The very scarce fossil microfauna are limited to species adapted to hypersaline conditions. This sequence is indicative of a lagoonal depositional environment in a warm and arid climate.
- (5)
- Rasova Formation (Oxfordian–Tithonian) [31,33]. The unit has a thickness of over 500 m and consists of dolomites (dolomicrites, dolosparites), dolomitic limestones, micritic limestones, and oosparites, with scarce fossil macro- and microfauna. Locally, the dolomites have a laminated appearance, with gray–yellowish bands alternating with greenish bands of more intense dolomitization. Marlstones, argillaceous limestones, and calcareous breccia levels appear as intercalations. Fractures/fissures and karstic dissolution voids are very frequent in this carbonate sequence, together with a porosity related to the dolomitization of limestones. These voids can be small and uniformly distributed or larger and irregular, forming channel systems. Likely, this occurs on a large scale, leading to an extended karst network within the Late Jurassic carbonates.
3. Borehole Data
3.1. Geological Investigations
3.2. Geophysical Investigation Program
4. Data Processing and Interpretation
4.1. Neutron Porosity Evaluation
4.2. Sonic (Acoustic) Porosity Evaluation
4.3. Cluster Analysis
- Define the number of clusters;
- Randomly initialize the cluster centroids (seed points);
- Assign data points to the cluster with the closest centroid;
- Recalculate the cluster centroids based on the data in each cluster;
- Repeat steps 3 and 4 until convergence is achieved, i.e., the cluster centroids stabilize and the allocation of data points to clusters remains unchanged.
4.4. Quantitative Log Interpretation
5. Results and Discussion
5.1. Quick-Look Analysis
5.2. Cluster Analysis Results
Formation Boundaries | BH-1 | BH-2 | BH-3 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Reported (m) | Estimated (m) | Estimated (m) | Estimated (m) | |
Q/CD | 25.0 | |||
CD/CC-I | 30.0 | 29.9 | ||
CC-I/PMSC | 45.0 | 44.7 | ||
PMSC/CC-II | 100.0 | 99.6 | 97.2 | 131.7 |
CC-II/EC | 161.0 | 160.0 | 160.6 | 191.8 |
EC/DC | 363.0 | 361.8 | 357.0 | 338.5 |
Cluster # | Data Points | GR (cps) | SHN (Ω m) | LONG (Ω m) | NPHI (V/V) | DT (μs/ft) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mean | SD | Mean | SD | Mean | SD | Mean | SD | Mean | SD | ||
K = 6 | |||||||||||
1 | 3977 | 7.959 | 3.694 | 707.457 | 1.622 | 1793.081 | 1.701 | 0.096 | 0.041 | 63.758 | 21.840 |
2 | 3239 | 17.792 | 6.026 | 151.015 | 1.632 | 361.160 | 1.924 | 0.460 | 0.061 | 66.733 | 9.427 |
3 | 3021 | 25.454 | 6.815 | 45.678 | 1.545 | 82.016 | 1.642 | 0.314 | 0.078 | 96.805 | 23.330 |
4 | 4725 | 25.910 | 5.302 | 104.988 | 1.360 | 223.512 | 1.454 | 0.231 | 0.063 | 67.865 | 8.368 |
5 | 2737 | 37.711 | 6.969 | 62.463 | 1.463 | 133.321 | 1.620 | 0.324 | 0.072 | 81.458 | 13.720 |
6 | 923 | 42.434 | 7.981 | 25.601 | 1.573 | 38.300 | 1.716 | 0.439 | 0.095 | 165.867 | 27.420 |
K = 7 | |||||||||||
1 | 520 | 5.785 | 1.765 | 394.912 | 1.746 | 835.853 | 1.748 | 0.169 | 0.060 | 128.789 | 31.360 |
2 | 3556 | 8.143 | 3.733 | 741.669 | 1.595 | 1921.366 | 1.643 | 0.090 | 0.038 | 57.645 | 10.220 |
3 | 3310 | 17.938 | 6.352 | 149.324 | 1.644 | 356.312 | 1.947 | 0.460 | 0.061 | 67.225 | 9.995 |
4 | 3978 | 25.958 | 5.770 | 113.177 | 1.326 | 244.974 | 1.412 | 0.220 | 0.061 | 66.978 | 7.980 |
5 | 4706 | 29.838 | 7.133 | 57.328 | 1.387 | 112.954 | 1.501 | 0.302 | 0.059 | 77.936 | 10.090 |
6 | 1954 | 35.846 | 9.696 | 41.824 | 1.621 | 76.507 | 1.821 | 0.355 | 0.086 | 113.833 | 16.050 |
7 | 598 | 43.351 | 7.583 | 22.046 | 1.443 | 31.501 | 1.622 | 0.473 | 0.085 | 181.870 | 18.640 |
5.3. Quantitative Log Interpretation Results
5.4. Groundwater Production Analysis (Borehole Testing)
Borehole | SWL (m) | PWL (m) | Q (L/s) | SC (L/s/m) |
---|---|---|---|---|
BH-1 | 4.00 | 10.00 | 16.0 | 2.67 |
BH-2 | 3.10 | 5.00 | 28.5 | 15.00 |
BH-3 | 5.17 | 5.92 | 21.2 | 28.27 |
6. Conclusions
- In the studied area, and likely in the entire Cernavodă tectonic block, the main interval with secondary porosity development (karstic dissolution features, fractures) and the maximum water-producing potential is located in the lower part of the Rasova Formation (639–700 m depth), in the limestones least affected by dolomitization. This finding has an important practical implication for the planning and drilling program of subsequent groundwater exploitation boreholes;
- The pumping tests and log interpretation results demonstrate a strong heterogeneity of the aquifer, with highly variable borehole productivities even on short distances. This variability is not only due to differences in porosity but also to different degrees of hydraulic connectivity within the carbonate reservoir, which are likely related to tectonic factors (amount of fracturing) or unequal karst development;
- The SE to NW direction appears to correspond to a trend of increasing groundwater productivity in the Cernavodă area and, possibly, at a larger scale. This is also suggested by a direct correlation between productivity and the lateral (horizontal) intensity of the calcite-to-dolomite replacement, with the dolomitization extent reflecting pore space connectivity. If confirmed by further research, this novel outcome can help optimize the placement of future extraction boreholes.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
clear all; close all; clc load Logs; N = length(DEPTH); for i = 1:N CAL(i) = CAL(i) * 25.4; if NEAR(i) > 1 TMP1 = FAR(i)/NEAR(i); else TMP1 = 1; end TMP2 = TMP1 * TMP1; TMP3 = TMP2 * TMP1; P214 = 0.01080258/TMP3 − 0.2344151/TMP2 + 4.779079/TMP1 − 9.517288; P150 = 0.01149102/TMP3 − 0.2548200/TMP2 + 4.857260/TMP1 − 8.734154; if CAL(i) >= 214 P(i,1) = P214; elseif CAL(i) <= 150 P(i,1) = P150; else TMP4 = (P214 − P150)/64; TMP5 = P150 − TMP4 * 150; P(i,1) = TMP4 * CAL(i) + TMP5; end end dlmwrite(‘NPHI.txt’, [DEPTH P], ‘delimiter’, ‘\t’) |
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BH-1 | BH-2 | BH-3 | |
---|---|---|---|
WGS 84 coordinates | 44°18′56.79″ N 28°03′24.30″ E | 44°19′02.94″ N 28°03′21.04″ E | 44°19′33.55″ N 28°02′20.29″ E |
Surface elevation * | 15.3 m | 14.2 m | 16.1 m |
Investigated interval | 16.4–702.6 m | 12.1–700.5 m | 108.9–699.8 m |
Run I | 16.4–154.2 m | 12.1–546.4 m | 108.9–549.9 m |
Run II | 127.5–471.7 m | 542.3–700.5 m | 536.2–699.8 m |
Run III | 460.4–599.9 m | ||
Run IV | 600.0–702.6 m |
Mnemonic | Measured Parameter | Description |
---|---|---|
GR | Iγ (cps) | Total natural gamma ray intensity |
CAL | d (inch) | Caliper (true diameter of the borehole) |
SHN | ρA,16 (Ω m) | Short normal (16 inch spacing) apparent resistivity |
LONG | ρA,64 (Ω m) | Long normal (64 inch spacing) apparent resistivity |
SP | ΔVSP (mV) | Spontaneous electrical potential (voltage) variation |
NEAR | In,Near (cps) | Intensity of neutron flux at Near (short spacing) detector |
FAR | In,Far (cps) | Intensity of neutron flux at Far (long spacing) detector |
DT | Δt (μs/ft) | Compensated sonic interval transit time (P-wave slowness) |
TEMP | T (°C) | Borehole temperature |
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Niculescu, B.M.; Bucur, M.M.; Talmaciu, A. Groundwater Exploration in Carbonate Reservoirs Using Borehole Investigations: A Case Study from South Dobrogea, Romania. Energies 2024, 17, 426. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17020426
Niculescu BM, Bucur MM, Talmaciu A. Groundwater Exploration in Carbonate Reservoirs Using Borehole Investigations: A Case Study from South Dobrogea, Romania. Energies. 2024; 17(2):426. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17020426
Chicago/Turabian StyleNiculescu, Bogdan Mihai, Maria Mădălina Bucur, and Adrian Talmaciu. 2024. "Groundwater Exploration in Carbonate Reservoirs Using Borehole Investigations: A Case Study from South Dobrogea, Romania" Energies 17, no. 2: 426. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17020426
APA StyleNiculescu, B. M., Bucur, M. M., & Talmaciu, A. (2024). Groundwater Exploration in Carbonate Reservoirs Using Borehole Investigations: A Case Study from South Dobrogea, Romania. Energies, 17(2), 426. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17020426