Matter
Juerg M.
Matter
Juerg M.
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ArticleGas Migration Episodes Observed During Peridotite Alteration in the Samail Ophiolite, Oman(American Geophysical Union, 2022-10-18) Aiken, John M. ; Sohn, Robert A. ; Renard, François ; Matter, Juerg ; Kelemen, Peter ; Jamtveit, BjørnSerpentinization and carbonation of mantle rocks (peridotite alteration) are fundamentally important processes for a spectrum of geoscience topics, including arc volcanism, earthquake processes, chemosynthetic biological communities, and carbon sequestration. Data from a hydrophone array deployed in the Multi‐Borehole Observatory (MBO) of the Oman Drilling Project demonstrates that free gas generated by peridotite alteration and/or microbial activity migrates through the formation in discrete bursts of activity. We detected several, minutes‐long, swarms of gas discharge into Hole BA1B of the MBO over the course of a 9 month observation interval. The episodic nature of the migration events indicates that free gas accumulates in the permeable flow network, is pressurized, and discharges rapidly into the borehole when a critical pressure, likely associated with a capillary barrier at a flow constriction, is reached. Our observations reveal a dynamic mode of fluid migration during serpentinization, and highlight the important role that free gas can play in modulating pore pressure, fluid flow, and alteration kinetics during peridotite weathering.
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ArticleThe response of borehole water levels in an ophiolitic, peridotite aquifer to atmospheric, solid Earth, and ocean tides(Elsevier, 2023-09-20) Sohn, Robert A. ; Matter, Juerg M.Peridotite aquifers are ubiquitous on Earth, but most are in the deep-sea, and thus difficult to access. Ophiolites provide a unique opportunity to study peridotite aquifers, and the Oman Drilling Project established a Multi-Borehole Observatory in a peridotite terrain of the Samail ophiolite. We use the water level response of two 400-m deep boreholes (BA1B, BA1D) to solid Earth, ocean, and atmospheric tides to investigate the hydromechanical structure of the aquifer. The two boreholes are offset by ∼ 100 m but exhibit markedly different tidal responses, indicating a high degree of short-length-scale heterogeneity. Hole BA1B does not respond to tidal strain or barometric loading, consistent with the behavior of an unconfined aquifer. Hole BA1D responds to both tidal strain and barometric loading, indicating some degree of confinement. The response to applied strain, which includes a non-negligible ocean tidal loading component, is consistent with a partially confined, low conductivity aquifer. The response to barometric loading appears to be affected by the complex hydrological structure of the surficial zone and we were not able to fit the observations to within error. Aquifer conductivity estimates for Hole BA1D based on the response to tidal strain are within a factor of ∼ 3 of pumping test estimates.