Abstract
Well logs, aquired in the two scientific drill holes of the German Continental Deep Drilling Program (KTB), provide continuous records of physical and chemical data of the metamorphic rocks penetrated. The 4-km-deep pilot hole was almost completely cored, enabling the well logs to be calibrated with regard to rock composition and structural features derived from laboratory analysis of cores. The observed relationships were transferred to the 9101 m deep, nearly uncored, main hole to reproduce in detail the lithology and to estimate physical properties from the logs. Synthetic lithological profiles were constructed for the pilot hole and the main hole by applying the electrofacies concept adapted to the crystalline environment. These profiles provide information on lithostratigraphy, alteration, cataclastic overprint, and petrogenetic features. Cross-hole correlations of these profiles reveal identical rock sequences for large sections of the drilled, metamorphic basement in both holes, in which the primary differences between the protoliths are largely preserved. Multivariate statistical methods were used to determine porosity depth functions from log responses. Linear as well as multilinear regression yielded continuous porosity profiles for both boreholes. Factor analysis was used to extract a parameter interpreted as a fluid and fracture indicator. Comparison of the porosity profiles with lithological information from log, core, and cuttings data revealed two different origins of increased porosity. Rock porosity and permeability are not only related to discrete planar discontinuities such as faults and fractures but also to more extensive zones of intense rock alteration where considerable matrix porosity occurs. Copyright 1997 by the American Geophysical Union.
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CITATION STYLE
Pechnig, R., Haverkamp, S., Wohlenberg, J., Zimmermann, G., & Burkhardt, H. (1997). Integrated log interpretation in the German Continental Deep Drilling Program: Lithology, porosity, and fracture zones. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 102(B8), 18363–18390. https://doi.org/10.1029/96jb03802
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