Friday, March 6, 2015

Proud of our Karoo - It is not all about fracking

Proud of our Karoo

The Karoo Basin has been the focus of international attention over the past few years, but not just because of the heated fracking debate. These rocks have a unique picture to offer the world. Around the globe, other basins like the Karoo are the source of oil and gas that allow your and my daily life to function. However, the internal structure of these basins is often complicated by other factors, which in turn affects the extraction of these natural resources. This is where our own Karoo basin comes in to play.

Around 300 million years ago a trip to South America, the Antarctic or Australia would have involved an overland drive, as all of these continents were merged into one big land mass. A large portion of this area, including the majority of South Africa, was covered by a large inland sea (so maybe a boat would have been more appropriate for the trip). Over time the basin filled up with sediments that were carried in by glaciers while the landmass was over the Polar Regions, and eventually rivers and windblown sand as the continents drifted to hotter latitudes. All of this was over a period of about a hundred and twenty million years.

After this the huge continental landmass started to break up with the crust weakening under the stress. This paved the way for magma from deep within the earth to travel up to the surface. Along the way some of this magma got trapped between layers of these sediments and formed what geologist call sills (horizontal magma tubes) and dykes (vertical magma tubes). The magma that wasn’t trapped poured out onto the surface of the earth forming a lava layer more than 1.8 km thick at a rapid rate of about 3 000 years (well, rapid in geological time).

The lavas used to cover the majority of South Africa but due to uplift and erosion by rivers such as the Orange River, today we see only a small remnant of these lavas in Lesotho and elsewhere. A large portion of the sedimentary rocks in the Karoo basin were also removed and in turn these dykes and sills were unearthed. And it is these bodies that scientists from abroad have come to the Karoo to study. The majority of these sills now form the tops of the flat-topped hills you see when driving from Johannesburg to Durban (like the ones you always enjoy just outside of Harrismith after your Wimpy breakfast pit-stop). These unique exposures allow scientists to see with their own eyes the remnants of processes that are otherwise taking place at great depths in the crust.

While these on surface observations are indispensable, seismic data provide the best picture of the rest of the basin that remains buried below our feet. Using this method, energy as vibrations is transmitted into the earth. At certain layers within the earth this energy bounces back to the surface. The time taken for this energy to reach receivers at the earth's surface allows scientists to calculate depths to these layers. Drilled boreholes in turn allow scientists to know which layers will be strong reflectors, and to confirm seismic results. Soekor, the forerunner to the Petroleum Agency of South Africa, collected over 13 000 line kilometres of these seismic data in the Karoo in the 1960s and 1970s. At present these old, low resolution data are the only data scientists have to use, as research organizations do not have the finances or capacity to collect new data over the entire basin. The interest from industry in the Karoo would provide an opportunity for higher resolution data to be collected, and allow us to better understand the basin. This would provide the country with a not-to-be-missed opportunity to quantify what shale gas resources we have, if any.

These existing seismic data show us that these sills are shaped like saucers, with diameters of between 5 and 30 km. While similar flat sheets that form at greater depth (up to 5 km) can stretch for up to 150 km. These sills have preferential been injected along certain layers, the organic-rich shale layer in the Karoo sadly being one of them. Scientists have shown that when the rising magmas came into contact with these shale layers, large amounts of carbon-dioxide were “burnt off” and often released explosively. This release of large volumes of gas in turn led to 6⁰C global warming and the extinction of marine species. This loss of gas will ultimately affect whether the Karoo is found viable for shale gas exploration or not. If too much gas has been released then fracking might not be profitable. On the flip side, the magma might have heated up some of the shale layers, bringing them to the correct maturity level for fracking. As this shale gas is 50% cleaner than coal, it provides a stepping stone for South Africa towards renewable energy…because let’s face it, we are all quite tired of load shedding

In addition, investigating the fracture systems linked to these sills and dykes is of vital importance when searching for ground water. In the Karoo this water is a lifeline for local communities, and drilling borehole into these fractures can help with groundwater exploration. These fracture systems will also need to be understood in order to avoid groundwater contamination if fracking takes place. Companies are thankfully aware of such complications and will steer clear of large concentrations of these sills and dykes because of the added complications.

So our Karoo is famous for more than just boiling hot days, wind mills and straight stretches of road. This massive basin is helping to shed light on unanswered geological questions around the globe, another reason to stamp it with the "Proudly South African" label.

For more information on the topic of fracking check out Ivo Vegter’s book “Extreme Environment”, or the easy to read 2011 scientific article by Prof. Maarten de Wit titled “The Great Shale Debate”.



- S.E. Scheiber-Enslin

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