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Elevation Grid for top Columbia River Basalt (CRBG) in the Portland Basin used in DDU Feasibility StudySource

The Portland Basin is a prime location to assess the feasibility of DDU-TES because natural geologic conditions provide thermal and hydraulic separation from overlying aquifers that would otherwise sweep away stored heat. Under the Portland Basin, the lower Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG) aquifers contain brackish water (1,000-10,000 mg/L TDS), indicating low groundwater flow rates and poor connection with the overlying regional aquifer. Further, CRBG lavas tend to have comparatively low thermal conductivity, indicating that the 400-1,000 ft thick CRBG may be an effective thermal barrier to the overlying aquifer. A temporally and spatially limited previous study of a Portland Basin CRBG aquifer demonstrated that the injection of waste heat resulted in an increase in temperature by more than a factor of two, indicating a high potential for storing heat. This data submission includes ASCII grid surfaces for the Portland and Tualatin Basins including a DEM of modern topography, the top of Columbia River Basalt (CRB), the base of CRB, and basement. It also includes three isochore (thickness) maps between these intervals. In addition, there is an ArcGIS attribute table for associated data points, a map of data types used to constrain the top of CRB, and cross-sections, all made using IHS Kingdom Suite, Petrosys PRO, ESRI ArcGIS, and Adobe Illustrator software.

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Tags:
ArcGISCRBGColumbia River Basalt GroupDDUDDU-TESDEMDeep Direct-UseGISOregonPortlandPortland BasinTEScross sectioncross-sectiondigital elevation mapelevationsenergyfeasibilitygeologygeospatial datageothermalmapoutcropseismicstructure mapsurveythermal energy storagewell data
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XLSXPNGPDFshtmlZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)over 1 year ago
Tularosa Basin Play Fairway Analysis: Weights of Evidence; Mineralogy, and Temperature Anomaly MapsSource

This submission has two shapefiles and a tiff image. The weights of evidence analysis was applied to data representing heat of the earth and fracture permeability using training sites around the Southwest; this is shown in the tiff image. A shapefile of surface temperature anomalies was derived from the statistical analysis of Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) thermal infrared data which had been converted to surface temperatures; these anomalies have not been field checked. The second shapefile shows outcrop mineralogy which originally mapped by the New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, and supplemented with mineralogic information related to rock fracability risk for EGS. Further metadata can be found within each file.

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Tags:
ASTERAnomaliyEGSMexicoNewPFATemperatureTexasTularosa BasinWeights of EvidenceWofEanomaliesbasingeospatial datageothermalmineralogynew mexicooutcropoutcrop mineralogyplay fairway anlaysissurfacethermal infraredtularosa
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ZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)over 1 year ago
West Virginia Marcellus Outcrop

West Virginia Marcellus Outcrop

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No licence known
Tags:
GeologyMarcellus ShaleResourceWest Virginiaoutcrop
Formats:
HTML
National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL)about 1 year ago