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The composition of groundwater in Palaeogene and older formations in the Netherlands. A synthesis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 June 2016

Jasper Griffioen*
Affiliation:
TNO Geological Survey of the Netherlands, P.O. Box 80015, 3508 TA Utrecht, The Netherlands Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht University, P.O. Box 80115, 3508 TC Utrecht, The Netherlands
Hanneke Verweij
Affiliation:
TNO Petroleum Geosciences, P.O. Box 80015, 3508 TA Utrecht, The Netherlands
Roelof Stuurman
Affiliation:
Deltares, unit Soil and Groundwater Systems, P.O. Box 85467, 3508 AL Utrecht, The Netherlands
*
*Corresponding author: Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

There is increasing interest in the exploitation of the deep subsurface of the Netherlands for purposes other than conventional oil and gas production, such as geothermal energy, shale gas exploitation and the disposal of radioactive waste, so for technical and environmental reasons it is important to understand the composition of the deep groundwater. A synthesis has been made of almost 200 existing groundwater analyses for the Oligocene and older formations in the Netherlands. Three groundwater categories are considered: (1) deep oil and gas reservoirs, (2) deep, buried and confined aquifers and (3) shallower, semi-confined aquifers with or without outcrop areas nearby. No distinct water types are found but a continuous series, with Cl ranging from around 10,000 to 200,000 mg l−1: the highest concentrations are found in the reservoirs and the lowest in the semi-confined aquifers. The most saline brines are found in the northern onshore area and adjacent offshore area, where Permian and Triassic rock salt also occurs regionally in the subsurface. The groundwater is usually pH-neutral, saturated in carbonates and anaerobic. Anhydrite saturation occurs when the Cl concentration exceeds 100,000 mg l−1, and halite saturation occurs at Cl concentrations close to 200,000 mg l−1. Few tracer analyses have been done for δ2H–H2O, δ18O–H2O, δ37Cl, Br, Li and B, which makes a rigorous palaeohydrological interpretation impossible. Lithium and B may be controlled by water–rock interaction which makes them less suitable as tracers. Some of the analyses suggest that dissolution of rock salt plays a role in determining the salinity of groundwater for some deep wells in the southern part of the Netherlands, whereas other analyses suggest that evaporated seawater influences the salinity in the associated wells. Cation-exchange patterns and alkalinity to Ca ratios indicate that groundwater in the deep, buried and shallow, semi-confined aquifers is usually freshening. Six 14C analyses of samples from the buried aquifers indicate an apparent age of at least 20,000 years. Six δ37Cl analyses of formation waters from reservoirs in South-Holland suggest diffusion of Cl from a brine towards fresher water, and the associated K and also Li concentrations further suggest that these brines are related to rock salt dissolution and are not the residue of evaporated seawater. The high Ca concentrations are enigmatic for the hypersaline formation waters in the reservoirs. A limited series of samples had been analysed for various trace elements. The median concentrations are similar to the seawater and Dutch background concentration limits for shallow groundwater, but maximum concentrations can be up to three orders of magnitude higher. In conclusion, the data synthesis shows that the composition of groundwater in reservoirs and aquifers of Palaeogene and older age varies strongly in salinity at the national scale. Presence of evaporite deposits and diffusive transport seem to play important roles in controlling the salinity. Many existing analyses have no or only a few tracer analyses, that even vary among the samples. A complete suite of analyses is needed to elucidate the hydrogeological and geochemical processes that control the groundwater composition.

Type
Original Article
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is unaltered and is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use or in order to create a derivative work.
Copyright
Copyright © Netherlands Journal of Geosciences Foundation 2016

Introduction

Anthropogenic activities in the deep subsurface of the Netherlands are still largely limited to exploitation of natural gas, oil and rock salt, but interest is growing in other activities (e.g. exploitation of geothermal energy, storage of CO2, underground disposal of radioactive waste, storage in salt caverns and shale gas exploitation) and there is potential for several of these in the Netherlands. Some of these activities (geothermal energy and CO2 storage, for example) are directed at exploited oil and gas reservoirs, while others are directed at geological units that have previously received little attention: for example, the Oligocene Rupel Clay (also known as Boom Clay, but here we use the official name according to Dutch lithostratigraphic terminology; see De Mulder et al., Reference De Mulder, Geluk, Ritsema, Westerhoff and Wong2003), which is considered a potential host rock for the geological disposal of radioactive waste in the Netherlands and Belgium because of the isolating potential of its poorly permeable, clay-rich rocks (Verhoef et al., Reference Verhoef, Neeft, Grupa and Poley2014).

It is important to know about the composition of groundwater under the Rupel Clay because it serves as the lower boundary condition for pore water within the Rupel Clay where diffusion, chemical osmosis or even advection may cause transport into or out of the Rupel Clay at the geological time scale. This groundwater also provides the background composition for radionuclides that might migrate from the base of the Rupel Clay, move further via groundwater transport in adjacent aquifers and in the long term might ultimately reach the biosphere. The Rupel Clay is part of a sequence of clay-rich Palaeogene and Neogene sediments which are widespread across the Netherlands (De Mulder et al., Reference De Mulder, Geluk, Ritsema, Westerhoff and Wong2003; Vis et al., Reference Vis, Verweij and Koenen2016). A consequence is that this sequence of sediments also serves as a divide between an upper groundwater compartment where advective flow is driven by precipitation excess and topography in free-draining areas and by fixed surface water heads in polders and a lower compartment with rather stagnant conditions for groundwater flow. In the latter, diffusion, compaction-driven flow and density-driven flow are operational processes at the geological time scale (Verweij, Reference Verweij2003). It is, therefore, practically assumed that the hydrological base level for the upper groundwater compartment in the Netherlands is the top of the Breda Formation or that of the Oosterhout Formation, which are both from the Neogene period (Dufour, Reference Dufour2000; cf. De Vries, Reference De Vries, Wong, Batjes and de Jager2007).

The deep subsurface thus coincides with a groundwater compartment that is essentially different from the shallower surface-driven one. There are several good reasons in addition to those mentioned above why it is important to know about the composition of deep groundwater (cf. Smalley & Warren, Reference Smalley and Warren1994): to understand the diagenesis of reservoir rocks, to determine the nature of basin plumbing and its hydraulic effects, to estimate water resistivity and density for the interpretation of geophysical measurements, to estimate the risks of scaling and corrosion of pipelines, to assess compatibility with injected fluids (aqueous and non-aqueous), and to establish natural background compositions (in relation to environmental and health risks as well as sustainability of subsurface storage and disposal). Clearly there is an overall need for insight into the composition of deep groundwater with respect to both the major groundwater composition (i.e. the species that control the salinity, carbonate state and redox state) and the background concentration of trace elements that are of environmental and health concern.

Several studies have addressed the composition of deep groundwater in the Netherlands, but they were usually locally oriented (e.g. Kimpe, Reference Kimpe1963; Glasbergen, Reference Glasbergen1981, Reference Glasbergen1985; Zuurdeeg & Coenegracht, Reference Zuurdeeg and Coenegracht1986) or focused on the typology of the major element composition (Verweij, Reference Verweij2003). They found that the presence of evaporites greatly influences the salinity and related major ion composition of deep groundwater. However, until now there has been no broad overview, and trace elements have received minor attention. Data on iodine and selenium are interesting in relation to the subsurface disposal of radioactive waste because 129I and 79Se are long-lived radioisotopes (half-lives of 1.61 × 107 and 3.25 × 105 years, respectively) present in radioactive waste. Data on other trace elements such as toxic heavy metals are interesting in relation to the re-injection of formation water produced during natural gas and oil production or the injection of the concentrates that are produced during reverse osmosis of brackish groundwater or surface water.

We set out to characterise the groundwater composition in Palaeogene and older geological units for the onshore and offshore European territory of the Netherlands. The Miocene Breda Formation lies immediately above the Palaeogene formations in many parts of the Netherlands. This study thus deals with the geological units below this base level, where advective groundwater flow is minimal, except in the areas close to the border with Belgium and Germany, where the Palaeogene, Cretaceous and Carboniferous units often lie closer to the surface.

Geological and hydrogeological settings

The Netherlands is part of the southern North Sea sedimentary basin. Geological characteristics and past and present geological processes of different duration have influenced present-day pressure, groundwater flow and hydrochemical conditions to a greater or lesser extent. Detailed information on the geology of the Netherlands can be found elsewhere (e.g. Van Adrichem Boogaert & Kouwe,Reference Van Adrichem Boogaert and Kouwe1997; Wong et al., Reference Wong, Batjes and De Jager2007). A summary of important features concerning the geological and hydrogeological setting of influence on present-day pressure and fluid flow conditions, largely taken from Verweij (Reference Verweij2003) and Verweij et al. (Reference Verweij, Simmelink and Underschultz2011, Reference Verweij, Simmelink and Underschultz2012), is given below. Figure 1 presents the main tectonic features and Table 1 provides an overview of the main permeable units of Palaeogene and older age present in the Netherlands.

Fig. 1. Map of the Netherlands showing structural elements (after Kombrink et al., Reference Kombrink, Doornenbal, Duin, Den Dulk, Van Gessel, Ten Veen and Witmans2012) and the well locations, with inside map showing the areal extent of Zechstein salt and the regions referred to in the text.

Table 1. The main permeable units in Palaeogene and older formations in the Netherlands (major oil and gas reservoirs in bold and italic; compiled from Bless, Reference Bless1981; Verweij, Reference Verweij2003; Wong et al., Reference Wong, Batjes and De Jager2007).

Burial history

The burial history of an aquifer or reservoir, i.e. the history of sedimentation, uplift, erosion and non-deposition, is a potential geological factor of influence on present-day pressure and groundwater flow conditions. There are important regional differences in sedimentation and erosion history in the study area (Verweij, Reference Verweij2003; Nelskamp and Verweij, Reference Nelskamp and Verweij2012; Verweij et al., Reference Verweij, Simmelink and Underschultz2012). At the large scale, the southern North Sea is a basin dominated by rifting during most of the Mesozoic Era and that has been in a post-rift sag phase since the Late Cretaceous Period (except for the Roer Valley Graben in the southern Netherlands: Van Balen et al., Reference Van Balen, Houtgast and Cloetingh2005). Permian Rotliegend sandstones form the main hydrocarbon gas reservoirs within this basin, where the gas originates from Carboniferous deposits. These sandstones were deposited in aeolian and fluvial environments and accumulated in a non-marine basin that subsequently transformed into the Zechstein Sea. During the Late Permian Period, evaporites precipitated from the Zechstein Sea. The evaporite sequence comprises carbonates via anhydrite to halite and eventually silvite. This sequence may be present laterally, in agreement with surface water systems draining northwards (Platt, Reference Platt1994). These evaporites, in particular the rock salt, are the main seal to the Rotliegend sandstone reservoirs.

The area became predominantly terrestrial again during the Early Triassic Period, with the Variscan Mountains to the south being the provenance area for the related sediments. A heterogeneous series of sediments was subsequently deposited, comprising claystone, evaporites and chalk, but few sandstones. During the Triassic and Jurassic periods, the single, southern Permian Basin transformed into a series of smaller fault-bounded basins and highs. Salt tectonics played a major role in large parts of the southern North Sea Basin, mobilising the Zechstein evaporites and resulting in salt diapirs that intruded into overlying Mesozoic or even Palaeogene sediments. The related Kimmerian tectonic phase induced a development where sediments accumulated in the rift basins such as the Broad Fourteens and West Netherlands basins during the Late Jurassic−Early Cretaceous periods and there was erosion of the existing platforms and highs. During this period, important gas and oil reservoirs were generated in these basins, where the source rocks are both Carboniferous and Jurassic. The accumulation of sediments in the subsiding basins induced compaction-related groundwater flow in the basins. The recharge of meteoric water in adjacent subaerial platforms and highs could enter the basins along the basin boundaries to some extent (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Aronson and Savin1989; Verweij et al., Reference Verweij, Simmelink, Van Balen and David2003). Widespread deposition of chalk occurred during the Late Cretaceous Period, due to regional subsidence.

The burial history from the Late Cretaceous Period onwards includes the following features. The widespread deposition of chalk was interrupted in the Mesozoic basins by inversion movements during the Late Cretaceous Sub-Hercynian tectonic phase. The central parts of the Broad Fourteens, Central Netherlands and West Netherlands Basins and Roer Valley Graben experienced strong uplift and erosion, while chalk deposition continued in adjacent areas. The Laramide regional phase of erosion terminated the deposition of chalk and was followed by regional subsidence of the Cenozoic North Sea Basin and deposition therein of predominantly marine clays with sandy deposits along the southern edge of the basin. The regional subsidence was interrupted again by the Late Eocene−Early Oligocene Pyrenean tectonic phase. This phase involved uplift and erosion of the southern onshore (West Netherlands Basin) but also extended westward into the Broad Fourteens Basin (Nalpas et al., Reference Nalpas, Le Douaran, Brun, Unternehr and Richert1995). During the Oligocene Epoch, the sea transgressed across previously eroded areas, resulting in marine deposits of the Middle North Sea group (including the Rupel Clay). Sedimentation was interrupted again at the end of the Oligocene (Savian phase of erosion). In the Neogene, deltas prograded from the south and southeast of the Netherlands and from Fennoscandinavia into the North Sea.

The West Netherlands Basin was uplifted and eroded during the Pyrenean and Savian phases, and sedimentation and subsidence were limited during the Neogene. In contrast, the Roer Valley Graben and Zuiderzee Basin (located in the Mesozoic Central Netherlands Basin) developed into depocentres. The Roer Valley Graben was reactivated and developed as part of the northwest European rift system from the Late Oligocene onwards (Michon et al., Reference Michon, Van Balen, Merle and Pagnier2003; Van Balen et al., Reference Van Balen, Houtgast and Cloetingh2005; Worum et al., Reference Worum, Michon, Van Balen, Van Wees, Cloetingh and Pagnier2005) and its subsidence accelerated during the Pliocene and Quaternary.

Lithostratigraphic build-up

The Carboniferous to recent lithostratigraphic build-up of the study area includes the following stratigraphic groups of large areal extent: Carboniferous Limburg Group (main gas source rock), Permian Upper Rotliegend Group (containing the main gas reservoir), Upper Permian Zechstein Group (the main caprock), Cretaceous siliciclastic Rijnland Group and Chalk Groups, and the Cenozoic clastic North Sea groups. The presence of the Germanic Trias Groups and marine clays of the Jurassic Altena Group (including the oil-prone Posidonia source rock) is more scattered. The greatest thickness of these groups occurs in the Mesozoic basins (such as the West Netherlands Basin, Roer Valley Graben and offshore Broad Fourteens Basin). The current distribution of the Late Jurassic to earliest Cretaceous Schieland, Scruff and Niedersachsen groups is also restricted to the Mesozoic basins.

The position of the Netherlands at the southern edge of large basins during most of its post-Carboniferous geological history has directly affected the facies distribution of the deposited sediments. Generally, more coarsely grained clastic sediments occur in the south. The Upper Rotliegend sediments consist of the coarser-grained clastics (conglomerates and sandstones of fluvial and aeolian origin) of the Slochteren Formation that grades northward into the finer-grained desert-lake deposits of the Silverpit Formation (Grötsch and Gaupp, Reference Grötsch and Gaupp2011). The marine Zechstein evaporites, carbonates and clays overlie the Upper Rotliegend Group. The southern limit of the Zechstein salts runs through the southern part of the Broad Fourteens Basin and Central Netherlands Basin. In the south the Zechstein is predominantly clastic. As already noted, in large parts of the southern North Sea Basin salt tectonics mobilised the Zechstein evaporites and resulted in salt diapirs that intruded overlying Mesozoic and even Palaeogene sediments. During the Early Triassic the area became predominantly terrestrial and erosion of the Variscan Mountains to the south produced the related sediments. The Lower Germanic Trias Group consists of lacustrine claystones and aeolian and fluvial sandstones, whereas the Upper Germanic Trias group consists mainly of lascustrine and shallow marine claystones, carbonates and evaporites (Röt to Keuper units). The distribution is most widespread for the Röt Formation and overlaps considerably with that of Zechstein salt. The Muschelkalk Evaporite Member also contains halite further south than the Zechstein: local occurrences are found in the West Netherlands Basin and in the Roer Valley Graben.

Hydrogeological setting

The most important lithostratigraphic units controlling formation water pressure distribution and flow conditions in the Dutch subsurface are the Salt Members of the Zechstein Group, because of their extremely low permeability and their large regional continuity. An important role is also played by the evaporite members of the Upper Germanic Trias Group (such as those of the Röt and Keuper formations). The southern limit of the Zechstein salts runs through the southern part of the Broad Fourteens Basin and Central Netherlands Basin. In the south the Zechstein is predominantly clastic. The remaining poorly permeable units consist of claystones/mudstones/clays. The more permeable stratigraphic units consist of sands, sandstones and carbonates: Table 1 presents an overview of the relevant permeable units as groundwater aquifers or oil and gas reservoirs, where several groundwater analyses were available for most of them.

Regional facies distributions over the onshore and offshore Netherlands result in generally more permeable facies in the south and an increasing number of interspersed sealing layers towards the northern part of the study area. Hence, in the north there are more vertical barriers to flow that slow down pressure dissipation. In addition, numerous deep faults and elongated salt structures disrupt the lateral hydraulic continuity of pre-Cenozoic hydrostratigraphic units. Large elongated poorly permeable salt structures related to basin boundary faults occur especially along the northeastern edge of the Broad Fourteens Basin and Lauwerszee Trough.

Palaeogroundwater flow conditions

The current hydrochemistry of pore water has been influenced to a greater or lesser extent by palaeogroundwater flow conditions. Two important palaeo types of regional groundwater flow identified in the study area are flow induced by sedimentary loading and flow induced by topography. Sedimentary loading may result in expulsion of pore water from clastic sediments, as well as expulsion of residual brines from evaporate deposits. All periods of sedimentation induce either compaction of the sediments and expulsion of pore water or create overpressured conditions in the sediments. The largest influence occurs during prolonged periods of rapid sedimentation. Topography-induced flow may introduce fresh groundwater of meteoric origin into reservoirs or aquifers. Large-scale northward-flowing systems have been identified, originating at the southern and southeastern margins of the Netherlands during different times in geological history (Late Carboniferous − Early Permian; Jurassic − Early Cretaceous; recent: Verweij, Reference Verweij1999). Diagenetic evidence exists that meteoric water infiltrating in the subaerial exposed Texel Ijsselmeer High entered the Permian Rotliegend reservoir in the northern part of the Netherlands during the Early Cretaceous, giving rise to the flushing of this reservoir (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Aronson and Savin1989). During the Late Cretaceous inversion of the centres of the West Netherlands and Broad Fourteens Basins, topography-induced flow developed, reaching Lower Cretaceous and possibly deeper reservoir units (e.g. Bouw and Oude Essink, Reference Bouw and Oude Essink2003; Verweij, Reference Verweij2003). Activated fault zones may create vertical pathways for groundwater flow. This has been identified for tectonically active periods, such as Jurassic rifting and Late Cretaceous inversion in, for example, the Broad Fourteens Basin (Verweij & Simmelink, Reference Verweij and Simmelink2002; Verweij, Reference Verweij2003).

Current pressure and groundwater flow conditions

The present-day depths to which local and regional topography-induced groundwater flow systems originating in the Netherlands lowland area penetrate are in the order of tens to hundreds of metres (e.g. De Vries, Reference De Vries, Wong, Batjes and de Jager2007). The recharge areas of supraregional groundwater flow systems are the Belgian Kempenland and Ardennes, and the German Eifel, Sauerland and Teutoburger Wald and their offshoots (Verweij, Reference Verweij2003). An important part of this supraregional flow is concentrated in the Roer Valley Graben (Luijendijk, Reference Luijendijk2012), where meteoric water has been able to infiltrate since the Miocene. Most flow in the graben is concentrated in the upper 250−500 m.

In the southern Netherlands there are a few groundwater head monitoring wells with deep screens in the Palaeogene or Cretaceous Houthem Formations. Three locations in the Roer Valley Graben and Venlo Graben indicate artesian conditions in the recent past (Stuurman, Reference Stuurman2000, Reference Stuurman2004). Hydraulic head measurements indicate the heads have dropped by 10−50 cm a−1 in response to lignite mining across the border in Germany or for other reasons. The present situation is thus far from representative of the natural situation. In Kempian Plateau and western Brabant, one of the three wells with screens in the Palaeogene aquifer shows artesian conditions at present (www.dinoloket.nl). A seventh location at the Peel Horst, where the screen depth is around 100 m (rather than the several hundred metres that is the case for the other, more westerly wells), does not currently have artesian conditions (Stuurman, Reference Stuurman2004). Further, two screens in Carboniferous and Devonian aquifers in Maastricht have piezometric heads a few metres above surface level (Glasbergen, Reference Glasbergen1985). A major shortcoming in these data is that no correction has been made for temperature and salinity.

The groundwater condition below the penetration depth of topography-induced groundwater flow can be characterised by the distribution of pore water overpressure. The overpressure of pore water at a certain depth is the difference between the measured pore pressure and the hydrostatic pressure at that depth. Gradients in overpressure are related to hydraulic head gradients. Keijzer (Reference Keijzer2000) and Garavito Rojas (Reference Garavito Rojas2006) recognised that buried clay layers such as the Rupel Clay may induce chemical osmosis and thereby impact on hydraulic heads because they may act as semi-permeable membranes. There is no field evidence that further illustrates the relevance of this transport mechanism at the local or regional scale.

Published information on the distribution of overpressure (Verweij et al., Reference Verweij, Simmelink and Underschultz2011, Reference Verweij, Simmelink and Underschultz2012) indicates overpressured conditions in Carboniferous, Upper Rotliegend and Triassic sandstone units in the northern and northeastern parts of the onshore Netherlands. Here the permeability framework is affected by lateral and vertical permeability barriers created by Zechstein and Triassic salt depots and structures, restricting the flow of water. Near-normal pressure occurs in the southern onshore and offshore areas (e.g. West Netherlands Basin, Roer Valley Graben). Faults are known to restrict water and gas movement in the deeper subsurface, where differences in overpressure have been observed (Corona, Reference Corona2005; Van Hulten, Reference Van Hulten, Jolley, Fisher, Ainsworth, Vrolijk and Delisle2010; Verweij et al., Reference Verweij, Simmelink and Underschultz2012). Bense et al. (Reference Bense, Van Balen and De Vries2003) and Caro Cuenca (Reference Caro Cuenca2012) showed that faults in the normally pressured Roer Valley Graben hamper shallow groundwater flow. The mechanisms that cause this sealing are smearing of clay along the fault plane, the juxtaposition of lithologies having strongly contrasting hydraulic conductivities, diagenetic salt plugging, or cementing by carbonates, sulphates or oxides. The latter three mechanisms (juxtaposition, salt plugging, cementing) have frequently been described for the southern North Sea Basin (Geluk, Reference Geluk, Wong, Batjes and de Jager2007b; Gaupp & Okkerman, Reference Gaupp and Okkerman2011).

Data

Groundwater analyses

Groundwater analyses were retrieved from a series of studies that deal with the composition of groundwater in Oligocene and older units: Jongmans & Driessen (Reference Jongmans and Driessen1932), Kimpe (Reference Kimpe1963), TNO (1974), Bless (Reference Bless1981), Glasbergen (Reference Glasbergen1981, Reference Glasbergen1984), Van der Weiden (Reference Van der Weiden1983), Coenegracht et al. (Reference Coenegracht, Van Rooijen and Zuurdeeg1984), Zuurdeeg et al. (Reference Zuurdeeg, Coenegracht, Mebius and Van der Weiden1984), Zuurdeeg & Coenegracht (Reference Zuurdeeg and Coenegracht1986), Core Lab (Reference Lab1987), Heederik (Reference Heederik1989), CMEO (1991), Beaucaire et al. (Reference Beaucaire, Pitsch, Toulhoat, Motellier and Louvat2000), Verweij (Reference Verweij2003) and Griffioen (Reference Griffioen2015). Data on groundwater composition in the Palaeogene aquifers in Zeeland were obtained from the DINO (Data and Information of the Dutch Subsurface) database. Not all data on the gas and oil reservoirs in South-Holland are included in this study because the compositions are very similar and bias would have resulted if all available data had been included compared to the amount of data from other Dutch reservoirs. The samples with the highest and lowest concentrations were selected per field, where this difference was usually less than 5% of the average concentration and 20% at most. Of the total of 113 analyses, 31 were included. No averaging was preferred, as this may obscure interrelationships among equilibrium-controlled concentrations. These data were extended with some analyses performed in the context of the re-injection of formation water produced during gas or oil exploitation. The data of Beaucaire et al. (Reference Beaucaire, Pitsch, Toulhoat, Motellier and Louvat2000) deal with groundwater in the Belgium Oligocene aquifer where the Rupel Clay lies at a relatively shallow depth (<490 m). All samples available originate from the onshore Netherlands, the Broad Fourteens Basin and the Central Offshore Platform west of this; no data were available for the northern offshore part of the Netherlands.

Analyses were considered when they contained several major compounds. When complete analyses were available (pH, Ca, Mg, Na, Cl, SO4, alkalinity, preferably also K, NH4, Mn and Fe, with Al and NO3 usually below detection limit), we selected the analyses which had a good electroneutrality (EN) condition. A good EN condition was defined as follows:

$$\begin{eqnarray*} &&- 5.0\% < {\rm{EN}} = \left( {{\rm{sum cations}} - {\rm{sum anions}}} \right)/{\rm{sum cations}}\\ &&\quad +\, {\rm{sum anions}}) < 5.0\% \end{eqnarray*}$$

Sometimes, several analyses were available for a sampling location. If they were very similar, only one analysis was selected: the most complete analysis having the least number of variables below detection limit. The resulting dataset comprised almost 200 samples.

In general, the analytical quality of the data was remarkably good when checked for EN condition: most samples had an EN condition less than 0.5%. In general, the agreement between the different analyses per screen was also good. For the Zeeland series (see Fig. 1 for location), a well with two screens having different depths showed a remarkable difference in composition between the sampling round in 1995 and the samples taken in 2006−2007: for both well screens, Cl in 1995 was around 100 mg l−1 but in 2006−2007 was around 2600 mg l−1. No further investigation was made at this location and the different samples remained in the database. For t1gxhe Twente series, a well having its screen at 44–60 m below surface in the Lower Cretaceous sandstone showed remarkable pH of 3 and Fe concentration of 680 mg l−1 with high SO4 of 2590 mg l−1 as well; check on the EN condition could not be performed because Na was lacking. This analysis was excluded although it might be due to pyrite oxidation under open-air conditions due to historical groundwater overexploitation of pre-Quaternary aquifers in the Twente area. As almost all the literature sources of the chemical data provided no details of the sampling and conservation procedures, the quality of the data cannot be assessed. As discussed by Verweij (Reference Verweij2003), the quality of chemical analyses of formation waters may be questionable, particularly because of contamination with mud filtrate. Of the formation water samples collected by Verweij (Reference Verweij2003), the ones selected for this study were those considered to be ‘representative’ or ‘probably representative’; those that the analysing laboratories reported to be either mud filtrate or formation water heavily contaminated with mud filtrate were excluded. The pH is particularly susceptible to changes during sampling, even when there is no actual contamination from drilling, because of the difference in temperature between the reservoir and the earth's surface (where the pH is measured), and the CO2 degassing during transport into the well. We used the reported pH values without adjusting them; however, our calculated saturation indices for Ca carbonates must be viewed with caution. Here, saturation index (SI) refers to the log value of the ratio between the ion activity product and solubility constant for a mineral: 0 indicates thermodynamic equilibrium conditions, below 0 undersaturation, where the mineral may dissolve when present, and above 0 supersaturation, where the mineral could precipitate.

Geochemical calculations

For speciation calculations, no temperature data were available for many analyses of groundwater under the Rupel Clay. They were therefore calculated as:

$$\begin{equation*} {\rm{Temp}}\left( {{\rm{sample}}} \right) = 10\,^\circ {\rm{C}} + {\rm{depth}}\left( {{\rm{sample}}} \right) \times 30\,^\circ {\rm{C}}\,{\rm{k}}{{\rm{m}}^{ - 1}} \end{equation*}$$

where depth is given in km and 30°C km−1 represents the temperature gradient for the Dutch subsurface (Verweij, Reference Verweij2003; Bonté et al., Reference Bonté, Van Wees and Verweij2012). When the calculated temperature was compared with the few measured temperatures as available for reservoirs at about 1800 m depth, the latter were 35–40°C lower. This implies erroneous measurements due to cooling, e.g. during pumping. Preference was given to the calculated temperature instead of the reported temperature, as we considered it to be more robust.

We performed the speciation calculations for the groundwater analyses with PHREEQC version 3 (Parkhurst & Appelo, Reference Parkhurst and Appelo2013). Both the Pitzer procedure and the regular Debye−Hückel procedure were used to calculate the aqueous activities of ions from the total concentrations for analyses of groundwater under the Rupel Clay. We used the recently released and improved Pitzer database (Appelo, Reference Appelo2015). The groundwater below the Rupel Clay has repeatedly been found to be a brine with Cl concentrations up to 200,000 mg l−1. The Pitzer procedure is more suitable for correcting for aqueous activity than the regular procedure for brines, but the associated database on the solubility of minerals and the temperature dependency of chemical equilibria is smaller. It does not contain Fe as element, so no calculations can be performed for diagenetic Fe minerals such as siderite (FeCO3), which is an important mineral in reservoirs and aquifers. In addition to its limited extent, the Pitzer database has some intrinsic shortcomings (Appelo, Reference Appelo2015; Rowland et al., Reference Rowland, Koningsberger, Hefter and May2015). A drawback of the regular database is the incorrect calculation procedure used to correct the concentration to activity for saline water. We used both databases to compile a dataset for groundwater under the Rupel Clay. Figure 2 compares the results for the SIs of halite and anhydrite as the difference between the two SI values per sample vs the sample's Cl concentration. The data show that the discrepancy is in the order of several tenths of a unit for halite and that for anhydrite it varies between several tenths of a unit and, at most, 2 units. The biggest discrepancy is found for the brines that in situ have a high temperature of about 100−130°C (i.e. the deepest samples); a smaller discrepancy is found when the in situ temperature is around 25°C (i.e. shallower samples). This illustrates that the temperature correction of the thermodynamic equilibria is important, in addition to the method used to calculate the activity. Here, the findings for calcite are similar to those for anhydrite. Preference was given to using the Pitzer procedure, but the regular database was used for calculations of Fe minerals.

Fig. 2. Relationship between the Cl concentration and the difference between the saturation indices of halite (above) and anhydrite (below) as calculated according to the Pitzer and regular procedures for the dataset considered.

To further test the assumption on the temperature calculation, a straightforward sensitivity analysis was performed by calculating the SI for a range of temperatures. The temperature dependency of the SI was somewhat dependent on the aqueous composition and mostly between −0.010 and +0.010 SI unit per degree Celsius. An error in temperature estimate of 10°C thus results mostly in an error in SI of ±0.1 or less.

Results and discussion

The hydrochemical data available for groundwater under the Rupel Clay can be separated into three groups: (1) Data on shallow (<100 m) to deep (mostly down to 560 m, with 6 out of 62 sampling locations between 680 and 860 m) groundwater in the former coal-mining district in southern Limburg, Zeeland, Twente and the Belgian Kempen region, where Palaeogene and older sediments lie close to or at the surface. Note that three of these areas lie in the London Brabant Massif and related Zeeland and Limburg Highs (Fig. 1). The sampling depths range from 30 to 480 m depth except for the Carboniferous samples from southern Limburg that originate from depths down to 860 m. (2) Data on formation waters in Permian to Early Cretaceous oil and gas reservoirs at 950–4000 m depth (mostly from South-Holland (West Netherlands Basin), northern onshore Netherlands (different basins and platforms), Broad Fourteen and Central Offshore Saddle basins). (3) Other data on groundwater across the Netherlands in Upper Devonian to Palaeogene aquifers and buried deep at several hundreds to 1100 m depth (and 5 out of 58 sampling locations even between 1360 and 2250 m below the surface). Here, most samples originate from central Limburg and Brabant where the locations lie in the Peel-Maasbommel Complex, Roer Valley Graben, Oosterhout Platform and Zeeland High (Fig. 1). For the sake of clarity, we will consistently refer to the first group as shallow, semi-confined aquifers, the second as reservoirs and the third as deep, buried aquifers. The behaviour of the Carboniferous rocks in the former coal-mining district in southern Limburg is intermediate between the first and third groups, as the type of overburden varies in thickness and hydrogeological characteristics. Table 2 presents basic statistics on groundwater composition for the three categories, and Figure 1 is a map showing the locations of the wells mentioned in the text. Table 1 serves as reference for the permeable units from which the samples studied originate.

Table 2. Statistical characteristics of the groundwater composition (mg l−1, with alkalinity as mg HCO3 l−1) for the three categories distinguished. Only medians are given for data series ranging from 5 to 20 samples.

The results of our study will be presented under six headings. First, it is appropriate to present the few findings on carbon isotopes and groundwater dating for limited characterisation of groundwater age, as this provides some boundary conditions with respect to time of infiltration. Subsequently, the major composition will be considered for the three groups, followed by a discussion of the role of diagenesis in the oil and gas reservoirs. Finally, attention is paid to those elements that are commonly found in trace concentrations in groundwater but whose concentrations may be high under the conditions encountered in Dutch deep groundwater.

Groundwater dating

A small series of six samples contained 14C analysis, two of which originated from Carboniferous and Upper Devonian units at Maastricht (Glasbergen, Reference Glasbergen1985), with the others from Palaeogene units at Nieuweschans, Broekhuizenvorst, Zegge and Maarle (Table 3). Laboratory analysis of the activity of 14C yields the ‘apparent age’ of groundwater, because the activity of total inorganic carbon (TIC) is determined and the TIC concentration is the result of all hydrogeochemical processes that have taken place from the infiltration area to the monitoring point. A correction must be made to transform the analysis from apparent age into true age. This may be very complicated, depending on the hydrogeological settings, the hydrogeochemical processes that affected the carbonate chemistry along the groundwater flow path, and the related origin and age of mineralised solid organic carbon or dissolved inorganic carbon. We did not attempt to correct the apparent age to true age because these conditions are insufficiently clear for the individual samples.

Table 3. Groundwater analyses (mg l−1, except when stated otherwise) for samples from buried aquifers and the reservoirs in South-Holland that may include isotope analysis, plus the reference for groundwater close to rock salt in Gorleben, Germany (Kimpe, Reference Kimpe1963; Glasbergen, Reference Glasbergen1981, Reference Glasbergen1984, Reference Glasbergen1985; Van der Weiden, Reference Van der Weiden1983; Heederik, Reference Heederik1989; Eggenkamp, Reference Eggenkamp1994; Kloppmann et al., Reference Kloppmann, Négrel, Casanova, Klinge, Schelkes and Guerrot2001; Griffioen, Reference Griffioen2015).

aCalculated from electroneutrality.

The laboratory analysis indicates that two samples had 14C activity below the detection limit of 2 PMC (per cent modern carbon). This yields an apparent age of at least 32,000 years according to the following formula:

$$\begin{equation*} {\rm{apparent\ age}} = \frac{{ - 5736\ln \left( {\frac{{{\rm{analysis}}}}{{100}}} \right)}}{{\ln 2}} \end{equation*}$$

where analysis refers to the 14C activity of the sample in per cent modern carbon. The other four samples had 14C activities of 0.4–9 PMC and thus apparent ages of 20,000−46,000 years. The true age will be lower, as radiogenic 14C becomes ‘diluted’ by 14C-free or 14C–poor solid reactants such as carbonate minerals or sedimentary organic matter (Clark & Fritz, Reference Clark and Fritz1997). The low 14C activities, however, make it unlikely that these groundwaters are younger than 10,000 years or thereabouts. As discussed later, few δ2H and δ18O analyses are available and two of them suggest rainwater recharge during a glacial period. Groundwater at the six sampled deep, confined aquifers is thus ‘old’, with values below 10 PMC. Comparable corrected ages were determined for groundwater in the Eocene aquifer in northwestern Flanders (Blaser et al., Reference Blaser, Coetsiers, Aeschbach-Hertig, Kipfer, Van Camp, Loosli and Walraevens2010), which is the extension of the Palaeogene aquifers in Zeeland.

Shallow, semi-confined aquifers

Figure 3 shows plots of the chloride vs sodium concentration for the shallow, semi-confined aquifers, where the seawater composition is indicated as reference. The Cl concentrations range from around 10 mg l−1 to 15,000 mg l−1 (except for one outlier of 24,800 mg l−1 in Carboniferous rock in south Limburg): i.e. the chloride concentrations are lower than in seawater (19,000 mg l−1). Fresh groundwater may thus be present when the pre-Neogene units lie within a few hundreds of metres below the surface, which can be related to infiltration of rainwater in outcrop areas or in the permeable units overlying them (Glasbergen, Reference Glasbergen1981). This is evidenced for groundwater in the Belgian Kempen by the presence of tritium (Beaucaire et al., Reference Beaucaire, Pitsch, Toulhoat, Motellier and Louvat2000). It is further illustrated in Figure 4 for groundwater in the Carboniferous unit in southern Limburg, where two groundwater types can be discerned: a shallower, fresh one and a deeper, saline one. Note that this area has been free of seawater influence since at least the Pliocene, i.e. for at least 5 Ma. The Cl concentrations for the four Belgian wells in the Palaeogene aquifer and close to the Belgian/Dutch border vary considerably − from 95 to 3357 mg l−1 − which implies that the fresh/saline interface in groundwater immediately below the Rupel Clay does not coincide with this border.

Fig. 3. Concentration plots of the compounds Na (above) and SO4 (below) vs Cl for groundwater in the shallow, semi-confined aquifers. Note the different kinds of scale axes. See Figure 1 for a map with the geographical names used.

Fig. 4. Chloride concentration vs depth for groundwater in the Carboniferous aquifer in the coal-mining district of southern Limburg (data obtained from Kimpe, Reference Kimpe1963).

Many samples plot above the seawater dilution line, which implies that they are enriched in Na relative to Cl (Fig. 3). This is probably due to cation exchange under freshening conditions. Fresh or brackish samples (Cl < 1000 mg l−1) are also enriched in K and Mg (not shown), which provides further evidence for freshening of the aquifers. However, the saline samples (Cl > 1000 mg l−1) are depleted in Mg, and the underlying reason is not obvious. They are also depleted in SO4, which indicates sulphate reduction. Conversely, the fresh samples are enriched in SO4 up to 2766 mg l−1, which indicates pyrite oxidation in open-air conditions and/or dissolution of gypsum or anhydrite (which are commonly found in Dutch, Cretaceous and older formations; Wong et al., Reference Wong, Batjes and De Jager2007). The fresh SO4–rich samples were from the Limburg mining district or Twente.

Buried, confined aquifers

Generally, samples from the buried, confined aquifers have higher ranges in concentrations for the main ions than those from the shallow, semi-confined ones, but lower ranges than those from the reservoirs (except alkalinity; Table 2). Figure 5 shows chloride vs sodium concentration for the buried aquifers as well as for the reservoirs. Both the seawater composition and brine as observed close to the Permian salt diapir in Gorleben, Germany (Kloppmann et al., Reference Kloppmann, Négrel, Casanova, Klinge, Schelkes and Guerrot2001), are plotted as references. We chose the latter as reference for dissolution of halite (‘halite brine’) although it is unknown how representative this composition is for dissolution of rock salt in the Netherlands. For the deep, buried aquifers, the chemical data indicate that groundwater is usually saline, with Cl between 1000 and 32,000 mg l−1 (Table 2). However, exceptions occur towards brackish or hypersaline, reflecting inflow of meteoric groundwater on the one side and contact with brine or rock salt on the other. In such cases, the highest Cl concentration exceeds the seawater concentration by less than a factor 2 and the lowest concentration no longer refers to brackish water.

Fig. 5. Chloride vs sodium concentration plot for groundwater in deep, buried aquifers or oil and gas reservoirs (one fresh, relatively shallow sample from central Limburg lies outside the graph).

Several relatively extensive analyses including isotopes are available for groundwater in buried, deep aquifers (Table 3; Fig. 6). A mixture of rainwater and seawater is indicated for the two aquifer samples from Nieuweschans, where the δ18O and δ2H values indicate that the fraction of rainwater varied from one-third to almost half. The other samples lie on the global meteoric water line (GMWL). Based on the few δ2H and δ18O isotope analyses (Fig. 6), it has been concluded (Glasbergen, Reference Glasbergen1984, Reference Glasbergen1985) that the origin of groundwater in these samples varies from rainwater infiltrated during a glacial period (at Maastricht), recent rainwater (at Broekhuizenvorst) and a mixture of rainwater and seawater (at Nieuweschans). For the latter, hydrological contact with a salt dome − and possibly evaporation too − also plays a role. For comparison, the isotope analyses for the Belgian semi-confined Palaeogene groundwater samples indicate a rainwater origin.

Fig. 6. Bromide, Li, I and B concentrations vs chloride as present for a limited series of samples together with the results of isotope analysis of H2O in some saline samples (the average for Dutch rainwater is shown for comparison, and GMWL stands for global meteoric water line). Samples with 100 µg Li l−1 refer to analyses below detection limit, which must be 100 µg l−1 or smaller. Seawater evaporation pathways according to data from Fontes & Matray (Reference Fontes and Matray1993a).

Few data on Br are present for the regular groundwater aquifers that do not serve as oil and gas reservoirs. The available Cl/Br data show that a series of Dutch samples lies on the seawater evaporation/dilution line (Fig. 6), including the two samples from the deep drilling in Asten that have Cl concentrations above that of seawater (and around 100 mg Br l−1). This implies evaporation of seawater prior to infiltration. The samples from the Belgian Palaeogene aquifers lie on this line, too. The samples from the former Oranje Nassau 1 mine, Broekhuizenvorst, Nieuweschans and Arcen deviate markedly from the Cl/Br seawater ratio and maybe so do the two samples from Maastricht that have the lowest Cl concentrations of this subseries. This being the case, the Br concentration of 140 mg l−1 vs the Cl concentration of 71,500 mg l−1 for Nieuweschans is remarkable. The saline nature of this groundwater just below the Rupel Clay in the Dongen aquifer at 582 m depth has been attributed to rock salt dissolution (Glasbergen, Reference Glasbergen1981). This should normally yield a lower Br concentration, as indicated by the halite brine reference and two Dutch samples from diapirs (Fig. 6): possible explanations for this, in addition to an analytical error, are dissolution in evaporated seawater or local presence of Br-containing salt that typically precipitates in the last evaporative stages. The isotopic data of δ2H (around −25‰) and δ18O (around −3‰) suggest a mixture of seawater and rainwater. An enrichment in Br relative to Cl can be explained by mixing with a residual brine, but these isotopic data make it unlikely that mixing with a residual brine from which halite has precipitated plays a role. So does the palaeohydrological evolution of the Palaeogene aquifer from which this sample is collected. The sample from Broekhuizenvorst lies on the GMWL but not on the Cl/Br evaporation line, so, based on these similar lines of evidence, the high salinity of this sample must be attributed to rock salt (note that Broekhuizenvorst lies along the Meuse River in the southern part of the Netherlands). A similar explanation may hold for the other samples that deviate from the Cl/Br seawater ratio and are also located in the southern Netherlands.

Boron and lithium can also be useful tracers to characterise whether mixing with residual brine or dissolution of rock salt affects the groundwater composition. Figure 6 shows plots of the limited series of Li and B analyses vs Cl; Tables 2 and 3 provide specific data. The seawater evaporation line is also plotted where the evolution beyond halite precipitation is also depicted (as provided by Fontes & Matray, Reference Fontes and Matray1993a): a brine becomes enriched in these two species relative to Cl as soon as halite precipitates due to subaerial evaporation. The data for the buried aquifers show that most samples lie above the seawater evaporation/dilution line. This suggests in the first instance that mixing with residual brines plays a role. However, some of the samples are so much enriched that they lie above any mixing line irrespective of which evaporative stage is considered for the residual brine. This holds in particular for the samples from Asten that contain 42,000–50,000 µg B l−1 and 2700–3000 µg Li l−1 (Table 3). It is generally recognised that lithium and boron may be leached from the solid rock matrix, causing enrichment of these species above the seawater evaporation line in saline, subsurface waters (Collins, Reference Collins1969; Giblin & Dickson, Reference Giblin and Dickson1992; Kharaka & Hanor, Reference Kharaka, Hanor and Drever2004). Here, enhancement of temperature causes leaching of Li and B from rock as well as immobilisation processes for B. The samples from Asten have the largest sampling depth of 1600 m within the deep, buried aquifer group, and the high Li and B concentrations may thus be explained by the related, high temperature.

Close to 60 analyses that contain results on major ions on groundwater in buried aquifers were included in our dataset. Figure 5 shows that for this series, fresh groundwater is enriched in Na relative to Cl, and the molar ratio is about 1 to 1 when Cl is between 2000 and 70,000 mg l−1 and above this concentration may be depleted in Na relative to Cl for the samples from the reservoirs. Figure 7 shows concentration plots for four other main compounds vs Cl. Near-identical patterns are observed for Ca, Mg and K in the buried aquifer samples: the data points lie above the seawater dilution line for fresh groundwater, and a near-linear pattern is observed up to Cl concentration of 70,000 mg l−1 that lies above (Ca) or between (K, Mg) the seawater evaporation line and the halite dissolution lines. The two most saline samples of the buried aquifer data group refer to samples from salt diapirs (Zuurdeeg et al., Reference Zuurdeeg, Coenegracht, Mebius and Van der Weiden1984): they lie below the seawater evaporation and halite dissolution lines, where the latter has the halite brine from Gorleben (Germany) as reference composition (Kloppmann et al., Reference Kloppmann, Négrel, Casanova, Klinge, Schelkes and Guerrot2001).

Fig. 7. Concentration plots of the main compounds SO4, Ca, Mg and K vs Cl for samples from the deep, buried aquifers and the reservoirs at linear (left) and logarithmic scale (right). Seawater evaporation pathways according to data from Fontes & Matray (Reference Fontes and Matray1993a). The mixing line represents mixing between a freshwater type and halite brine.

A mixing line between fresh water and halite brine is also plotted in the log graphs for K and Mg (Fig. 7), where the fresh end-member contains 10 mg l−1 as reference concentrations for Cl, K and Mg. Most samples lie above this mixing line, too. When the brackish and saline samples are the result of mixing between fresh water and seawater (evaporated or not) or halite brine, these samples are thus enriched in Na and also in Mg and K when halite brine is assumed as end-member, but are mostly depleted in Mg and K when seawater is assumed as end-member. Enrichments of these cations can be attributed to cation-exchange or weathering processes; depletions are solely attributable to cation exchange, as dolomite precipitation and precipitation of K-bearing minerals is unlikely at the in situ temperatures of most buried aquifers sampled (mostly below 40°C). The results for alkalinity and Ca suggest that cation exchange is an active process for these brackish and saline samples: Figure 8 illustrates that the alkalinity to Ca ratio on an equivalent basis is frequently substantially higher than 1, i.e. the ratio cannot be explained by congruent dissolution of Ca carbonate by which similar equivalent concentrations of Ca2+ and HCO3 become produced. It is worth pointing out that the alkalinity is frequently several hundreds of mg l−1 in this data group and also in the shallow, semi-confined aquifer group (data not shown). As groundwater is usually saturated or supersaturated for calcite (Fig. 9) and the Lower Carboniferous, Cretaceous and Palaeogene aquifers are mostly marine, calcareous deposits, it is unrealistic to suppose that the concentrations of Na, K, Mg and Ca are controlled by silicate weathering where Ca silicates are barely present. Dissolution of gypsum or anhydrite, if present, is also unlikely as a control because SO4 is mostly diminished compared to the seawater ratio (Fig. 7) and additional SO4 reduction would not enhance the Ca concentration under Ca carbonate equilibrium. A combination of cation exchange and Ca carbonate precipitation/dissolution is more likely where the overall status is freshening. This may be less self-evident for the lacustrine and fluvial Late Carboniferous rocks that also contain coal but that may be less carbonate-rich. However, groundwater in the Carboniferous aquifers in south Limburg is mostly saturated in Ca carbonates and frequently has alkalinity to Ca equivalent ratios above 1.5. This groundwater thus has no general characteristics that differ from those of the other aquifers. Except for the small series of samples discussed earlier, there is no evidence on whether mixing with seawater (evaporated or not) or dissolution of rock salt is the major process that determines the brackish or saline nature of many samples in the buried, confined aquifers. The Cl to Br ratio for the small series suggests that both processes may be operational in deep, pre-Neogene aquifers in the Netherlands.

Fig. 8. Alkalinity to Ca ratio vs the Cl concentration for samples from the three data groups.

Fig. 9. Saturation indices of halite, anhydrite, calcite and siderite vs the Cl concentration of groundwater for samples from the three data groups. Note the different scales of the x/y-axes.

Oil and gas reservoirs

Table 2 shows that the oil and gas reservoirs have the highest ranges in formation water concentrations for the main ions except for alkalinity. The chloride concentrations for the reservoirs are presented in Figure 5, plotted against the sodium concentrations. The reservoirs in South-Holland, Broad Fourteens Basin (which lies off the coast of North-Holland and is oriented southeast−northwest) and northeastern Netherlands have Cl concentrations above 40,000 mg l−1, i.e. more than twice as high as in seawater. Water containing such high Cl concentrations will henceforth be referred to as hypersaline. The highest concentrations observed equal the Cl concentrations close to the salt dome in Gorleben. Groundwater having more than 85,000 mg Cl l−1 has only been encountered in the reservoirs in the northeastern Netherlands and deep (>2800 m) reservoirs in Broad Fourteens Basin and Central Offshore Saddle. Exceptional samples from the Carboniferous Limestone Group at 1700 m depth in Merksplas and 2250 m depth in Turnhout (B), have 60,000 and 80,300 mg Cl l−1, respectively. No such hypersaline water has been observed elsewhere in the southern part of the Netherlands, not even in the reservoirs at about 900−1800 m depth in South-Holland. These reservoirs have a typical Cl concentration of 42,000−62,000 mg l−1. Verweij (Reference Verweij2003) attributed this to a combination of two reasons: (1) absence of major halite deposits in the southern part of the Netherlands and (2) meteoric flushing during Tertiary and Quaternary times. Permian Zechstein salt is the most widespread and thickest halite deposit in the Netherlands. It is found in the northern half of the Netherlands (Fig. 1; Geluk, Reference Geluk, Wong, Batjes and de Jager2007a). Halite deposits are also known for the Triassic Röt, Muschelkalk and Keuper Formations (Upper Germanic Trias Group) and Late Jurassic Weiteveen Formation (Schieland Group) (Geluk, Reference Geluk, Wong, Batjes and de Jager2007b). The distribution is most widespread for the Röt Formation and overlaps considerably with that of Zechstein salt. The Muschelkalk Evaporite Member also contains halite more southward than the Zechstein: local occurrences are found in the West Netherlands Basin and in the Roer Valley Graben. In Broad Fourteens Basin, hypersaline groundwater is observed in both the Permian Rotliegend deposits below and the Lower Triassic and Lower Cretaceous deposits above the Permian Zechstein evaporites. All wells in the Central Offshore Platform refer to the Rotliegend deposits below: one well has 45,000 mg Cl l−1 and three others approximately 150,000 mg Cl l−1.

Sulphate ranges from below detection limit to 2000 mg l−1, with one outlier. This outlier having 11,350 mg SO4 l−1 may be meaningful, as the electroneutrality condition for this sample is better when this concentration is considered. Up to 70,000 mg Cl l−1, groundwater is unsaturated for both anhydrite and gypsum (Fig. 9). Thus calcium sulphate precipitation does not control the SO4 concentration for these waters; the major influence is most likely reduction of SO4, combined with mineralisation of organic matter.

There are several tracers that may provide insight into the hydrogeological mechanism responsible for the brine compositions (e.g. Fontes & Matray, Reference Fontes and Matray1993a, Reference Fontes and Matray1993b; Eastoe et al., Reference Eastoe, Long and Knauth1999; Kharaka & Hanor, Reference Kharaka, Hanor and Drever2004). The Cl to Br ratio may give a clue, because as a result of evaporation this is equal to the seawater weight ratio of 292 for brines, is lower for interstitial water when there has been precipitation of rock salt, and exceeds 1000 when natural rock salt has dissolved into flowing groundwater (Kloppmann et al., Reference Kloppmann, Négrel, Casanova, Klinge, Schelkes and Guerrot2001). Kloppmann et al. (Reference Kloppmann, Négrel, Casanova, Klinge, Schelkes and Guerrot2001) observed Br concentrations of 55−65 mg Br l−1 for brines having 182,000−192,000 mg Cl l−1 in the vicinity of the Gorleben salt dome and around 20−25 mg Br l−1 for brines having 40,000−65,000 mg Cl l−1. Two hypersaline Dutch samples from ‘a salt diapir’ fit into this picture, having Cl concentrations of 148,000 and 209,000 mg l−1 (Fig. 6). Unfortunately, there are no data on Br for the brines in the oil and gas reservoirs except for wells Akkrum 13 in Friesland and Bergermeer 4 in North-Holland (Fig. 6). Akkrum 13 is hypersaline, with a Br concentration between that of evaporated seawater and halite brine, and the Bergermeer 4 data suggest a straightforward mixture of seawater and halite brine. The Cl to Br ratio from these two samples gives no clues about the origin of the brines.

δ2H and δ18O isotopic analyses of formation water are present for only four samples from South-Holland (Fig. 6; Van der Weiden, Reference Van der Weiden1983): the data vary around −3 for δ18O and −22 for δ2H, which suggests a mixture of seawater and rainwater. These four samples have a Cl concentration close to 60,000 mg l−1. A third tracer is the isotopic ratio of stable Cl: the δ37Cl of rock salt at evaporation of 0.0‰ seawater varies between −0.5 and +0.5‰, with the highest values associated with halite and the lower ones with other K and Mg salts (Eggenkamp et al., Reference Eggenkamp, Kreulen and Koster van Gross1995; Eastoe et al., Reference Eastoe, Long, Land and Kyle2001). The related evaporated brine has δ37Cl values down to −0.9‰, where such a value is associated with the last stage of evaporation and precipitating K/Mg salts (Eggenkamp et al., Reference Eggenkamp, Kreulen and Koster van Gross1995; Eastoe et al., Reference Eastoe, Long and Knauth1999). Eggenkamp (Reference Eggenkamp1994) analysed eight samples that were studied by Van der Weiden (Reference Van der Weiden1983) too. Some samples were analysed for both H2O and Cl isotopes (cf. Table 3). The δ37Cl values vary between −1.77 and −0.46‰, with a good positive correlation (r2 = 0.89) with the Cl concentration for six samples from sandstones, while two samples from sand/shale beds lie below this regression line. Eggenkamp (Reference Eggenkamp1994) concluded that the samples formed by mixing of interstitial water from a source rock and aquifer water. This explanation does not hold for the two sand/shale samples, for which ultrafiltration or diffusion with related isotopic fractionation provides a better explanation. Many mixing scenarios can be established between seawater (evaporated or not), fresh meteoric water, dissolution of rock salt and diffusion, to explain the observations of the δ2H, δ18O and δ37Cl tracers for these reservoir samples from South-Holland. Note that this group of samples lies below the halite dissolution line for K and between this line and the seawater evaporation line for Mg. This might indicate that neither KCl salts nor evaporative brines play a role in their last stages, although K may also disappear in secondary reactions.

As discussed for the deep, buried aquifers, Li and B may also be useful tracers on the genesis of brines. Figure 6 shows their concentrations for ten samples from the South-Holland reservoirs and Tables 2 and 3 provide additional data. Unfortunately, no Br analysis was available for these samples. It is striking that, for B, the samples lie above the seawater evaporation line and, for Li, they lie below (where the samples with 100 µg Li l−1 actually refer to analyses below unknown detection limit, which must be 100 µg l−1 or smaller based on other samples). This different behaviour implies that water–rock interactions play a role for at least one of these solutes. The highest B concentrations around 40,000 µg l−1 cannot be explained by mixing with any residual brine as B is too high for this compared to Cl. Conversely, the lower Li concentration can be explained by mixing with a brine from halite dissolution.

Important types of palaeogroundwater flow in the reservoirs are induced by sedimentary loading and topography-driven flow (Verweij et al., Reference Verweij, Simmelink, Van Balen and David2003). Sedimentary loading will probably expel residual brines from the evaporite deposits, and topography-driven flow may introduce fresh groundwater in the reservoir's aquifer under palaeoenvironmental conditions. The palaeohydrological and diagenetic evolution of the reservoirs in the southern North Sea Basin is very complicated and varies among the individual sub-basins (Verweij et al., Reference Verweij, Simmelink, Van Balen and David2003, Reference Verweij, Simmelink and Underschultz2011; Gaupp & Okkerman, Reference Gaupp and Okkerman2011). Diagenetic evidence exists that meteoric water entered the Permian Rotliegend reservoir in the northern part of the Netherlands during the Early Cretaceous Period, giving rise to flushing of this aquifer (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Aronson and Savin1989). Palaeohydrological evidence also exists that topography-driven flow could reach great depths in the Triassic and Lower Cretaceous reservoirs above the Zechstein evaporites during the Late Cretaceous Period in the northern Broad Fourteens Basin (Bouw & Oude Essink, Reference Bouw and Oude Essink2003). There is also evidence that the Permian Rotliegend reservoir is overpressurised under present-day conditions, with the degree of overpressurisation increasing from southeast to northwest under the southern North Sea (Verweij et al., Reference Verweij, Simmelink and Underschultz2011). This suggests the presence of compaction-driven flow and absence of topography-driven flow under current conditions for this reservoir. The palaeo-fluid movements are difficult to reconstruct: the situation is further complicated by the influx of groundwater and hydrocarbons from the deeper Carboniferous formations during the palaeoenvironmental evolution of the Rotliegend reservoir (Gaupp & Okkerman, Reference Gaupp and Okkerman2011). Whether residual brine is still present in this reservoir under the Zechstein evaporites cannot be ascertained from the available hydrochemical data. Dissolution of rock salt together with fractionating diffusion, however, seems a plausible phenomenon for the South-Holland reservoirs above the Zechstein evaporites.

Figure 7 shows that the Ca concentrations outrange the SO4 concentrations by far for the most saline reservoir brines, when dissolution of gypsum or anhydrite as evaporites is assumed to be the principal source. The brines in the Broad Fourteens Basin usually have 43–2620 mg SO4 l−1 (except for one outlier), whereas the brines in South-Holland repeatedly have SO4 below detection limit. It is also known that the natural gas may contain up to 7 ppm H2S in the reservoirs in South-Holland (Core Lab, Reference Lab1987). This means that the gas is not classified as sour (criterion >1% H2S; Lokhorst, Reference Lokhorst1998). With one exception, all SO4 concentrations in saline or hypersaline groundwater lie below those of the seawater and the halite brine: the groundwater is always depleted in SO4 by comparison with two end-member solutions, which is probably due to sulphate reduction and possibly anhydrite equilibrium for the reservoir formation waters having Cl above 100,000 mg l−1 (Fig. 9). The first process is mediated microbially below 80°C and thermochemically above 100°C or even 160°C (Machel, Reference Machel2001). To reach 100°C, the corresponding depth must be about 3 km, assuming a thermal gradient of 30°C km−1 (Verweij, Reference Verweij2003; Bonté et al., Reference Bonté, Van Wees and Verweij2012). The gas and oil fields in South-Holland lie at a depth of 900−1800 m, with corresponding temperatures around 30−60°C. One may thus wonder whether thermochemical SO4 reduction could have played a role for these reservoirs, which would imply that the reduction of SO4 was microbially controlled or the pore water originates from deeper. Conversely, biodegraded oils are present in the Lower Cretaceous reservoirs of South-Holland due to tectonic inversion which brought these reservoirs close to the surface at the onset of the Palaeogene (De Jager & Geluk, Reference De Jager, Geluk, Wong, Batjes and de Jager2007), so microbial reduction of SO4 is plausible too.

Figure 7 also shows that the Ca concentrations are substantially higher than the K or Mg concentrations for the most saline groundwater in the reservoirs (Cl > 100,000 mg l−1) and also exceed by far the seawater and halite brine concentrations (except for one outlier). They generally increase with the Cl concentration. For K, two clusters are found: one saline, which lies below the halite brine dissolution line and one hypersaline, which mostly lies between this line and the seawater evaporation line. With the exception of one outlier, the Mg concentrations also lie between these two lines. Most samples from the first cluster originate from the South-Holland reservoirs and those from the second originate mostly from the Broad Fourteens Basin.

Two mechanisms may give rise to brines in the oil and gas reservoirs of the North Sea Basin and elsewhere: mixing with connate water expelled from evaporites under compaction that had undergone evaporation beforehand (‘residual brines’) or dissolution of evaporite minerals such as rock salt. Egeberg & Aagaard (Reference Egeberg and Aagaard1989) attributed the brines in oil fields on the Norwegian shelf to the former process, and Verweij (Reference Verweij2003), following Hanor (Reference Hanor1994), attributed the brines in the deeper Dutch subsurface to the latter. For deep groundwater (having Cl concentrations up to 30,000 mg l−1) in Upper Cretaceous Chalk in Zealand (Denmark), Bonnesen et al. (Reference Bonnesen, Larsen, Sonnenborg, Klitten and Stemmerik2009) also deduced an origin from mixing between residual brine and meteoric water. An alternative explanation proposed by Worden et al. (Reference Worden, Manning and Bottrell2006) for the high Cl concentrations of around 120,000 mg l−1 in a Triassic oil-bearing sandstone in the Wessex Basin (southern England) was dissolution of Upper Triassic evaporites. Both mechanisms thus seem operational in northwestern Europe.

The behaviour of Ba and Sr is also relevant in brines because barite (BaSO4) may precipitate and contribute to the cementing of grains (Gluyas et al., Reference Gluyas, Jolley and Primmer1997), with Sr co-precipitating, and diagenetic anhydrite may contain Ba and Sr (Purvis, Reference Purvis1992; Sullivan et al., Reference Sullivan, Haszeldine, Boyce, Rogers and Fallick1994). Both cations have frequently been analysed in the hypersaline solutions, and concentrations range up to a few thousand mg l−1 for Sr and a few tens ofmg l−1 for Ba (except for one extreme of 250 mg Ba l−1). Figure 10 shows the observed Ba and Sr concentrations plotted against SO4. An inverse relationship with a 1 to 1 slope at logarithmic scale can be recognised for the data points on the upper right-hand side. This could be indicative of an equilibrium relationship with a solubility control by SO4 minerals for these two divalent cations. Supersaturation for barite (BaSO4) is usually found for saline or hypersaline groundwater, and for celestite, also for the hypersaline groundwater, but the saturation index of celestite varies from −3 to 1 for saline groundwater.

Fig. 10. Strontium (with solubility line for celestite; above) and Ba (with that for barite; below) concentrations vs the SO4 concentration for a limited series of samples from the deep, buried aquifers and the reservoirs.

Role of diagenesis in reservoirs

The oil and gas reservoirs have undergone all kinds of diagenetic processes (Purvis, Reference Purvis1992; Gaupp & Okkerman, Reference Gaupp and Okkerman2011; Fischer et al., Reference Fischer, Dunkl, Von Eynatten, Wijbrans and Gaupp2012), which are partly related to these reservoirs having higher temperatures than the younger, buried Palaeogene aquifers. Speciation calculations using PHREEQC (Parkhurst & Appelo, Reference Parkhurst and Appelo2013) indicate that only the most hypersaline solutions are supersaturated for halite (Fig. 9). This shows that the production of dissolved Na+ and the immobilisation of Na+ are spatially and temporally decoupled, because otherwise halite saturation could be maintained. The hypersaline groundwater is also saturated or supersaturated for anhydrite (Fig. 9; and also gypsum). Strong supersaturation with respect to calcite and dolomite is found for many samples, whereas the saturation state for siderite varies (Fig. 9). The calculation is, however, probably imperfect, particularly due to sampling errors for pH, shortcomings in the thermodynamic calculations and slight errors in the way temperature was estimated. Precipitation of siderite and calcite occurs under more variable geochemical conditions, including low temperatures. Precipitation of dolomite may play a role during diagenesis in the oil- and gas-bearing formations such as the Rotliegend sandstone (Purvis, Reference Purvis1992; Gluyas et al., Reference Gluyas, Jolley and Primmer1997; Gaupp & Okkerman, Reference Gaupp and Okkerman2011). This may influence the Mg concentration in addition to the Ca concentration. Dolomite precipitation is more unlikely in shallower groundwater aquifers, as dolomite precipitation is slow at low temperature whereas calcite precipitation is not, and supersaturation of both carbonates usually happens (Arvidson & Mackenzie, Reference Arvidson and Mackenzie1999).

The more disperse concentration patterns for the four major cations above 85,000 mg Cl l−1 by comparison with the patterns below 70,000 mg l−1 have been attributed to dissolution of halite with minor secondary reactions for Na below 70,000 mg Cl l−1 and important secondary reactions above. One mechanism that has been proposed (Land & Prezbindowski, Reference Land and Prezbindowski1981; Egeberg & Aagaard, Reference Egeberg and Aagaard1989) is albitisation of Ca feldspars in the reservoirs containing NaCl brine:

$$\begin{eqnarray*} &&{\rm{N}}{{\rm{a}}^ + } + {\rm{CaS}}{{\rm{i}}_2}{\rm{A}}{{\rm{l}}_2}{{\rm{O}}_8} + {{\rm{H}}_4}{\rm{Si}}{{\rm{O}}_4} + \raise.5ex\hbox{$\scriptstyle 1$}\kern-.1em/ \kern-.15em\lower.25ex\hbox{$\scriptstyle 2$} {\rm{ H^{+}}}\ \rightarrow {\rm{NaS}}{{\rm{i}}_3}{\rm{Al}}{{\rm{O}}_8} + {\rm{C}}{{\rm{a}}^{2 + }}\\ &&\quad + 2\,{{\rm{H}}_2}{\rm{O}} + \raise.5ex\hbox{$\scriptstyle 1$}\kern-.1em/ \kern-.15em\lower.25ex\hbox{$\scriptstyle 2$} \,{\rm{A}}{{\rm{l}}_2}{{\rm{O}}_3} + \raise.5ex\hbox{$\scriptstyle 1$}\kern-.1em/ \kern-.15em\lower.25ex\hbox{$\scriptstyle 2$} \,{\rm{O}}{{\rm{H}}^ - } \end{eqnarray*}$$

where Na+ originates from an evaporated seawater residue or dissolution of halite:

$$\begin{equation*} {\rm{NaCl}}\ \rightarrow {\rm{N}}{{\rm{a}}^ + } + {\rm{C}}{{\rm{l}}^ - } \end{equation*}$$

Egeberg & Aagaard (Reference Egeberg and Aagaard1989) argued that transformation of K feldspar is unlikely both thermodynamically and in relation to the depletion of K below the seawater evaporation line. Illitisation of the reservoirs is commonly observed and the temperature under which illite formed varies strongly. The source of the K-bearing fluid is still uncertain (Gaupp & Okkerman, Reference Gaupp and Okkerman2011): both non-correlation between feldspar dissolution and amount of authigenic clay, and increasing feldspar dissolution in association with precipitation of illite and/or kaolinite have been observed. Zechstein rock salt has also been inferred to be the source of the K fluid.

Calcium concentrations above the seawater evaporation line are observed in our samples. Weathering of Ca feldspars may be a plausible explanation, although the Rotliegend Sandstone in the southern part of the North Sea Basin is usually poor in Ca feldspars but not in K feldspar (e.g. Purvis, Reference Purvis1992; Gluyas et al., Reference Gluyas, Jolley and Primmer1997; Ziegler, Reference Ziegler2006). Diagenetic overgrowths of K and Na feldspars are even found in this reservoir rock (Gaupp & Okkerman, Reference Gaupp and Okkerman2011; Fischer et al., Reference Fischer, Dunkl, Von Eynatten, Wijbrans and Gaupp2012). The Ca concentrations are not balanced by SO4 concentrations, which suggests in the first instance that neither gypsum nor anhydrite dissolution plays a role, whereas these evaporites are commonly found as precursors when halite as evaporite is also found. However, anaerobic oxidation of methane in association with SO4 reduction has been observed at elevated temperatures in hydrothermal systems (Holler et al., Reference Holler, Widdel, Knittel, Amann, Kellermann, Hinrichs, Teske, Boetius and Wegener2011; Biddle et al., Reference Biddle, Cardman, Mendlovitz, Albert, Lloyd, Boetius and Teske2012; Adams et al., Reference Adams, Haorfrost, Bose, Joye and Girguis2013). These observations raise the question of whether transformation of anhydrite to calcite may happen in association with methane oxidation (Holler et al., Reference Holler, Widdel, Knittel, Amann, Kellermann, Hinrichs, Teske, Boetius and Wegener2011):

$$\begin{equation*} {\rm{CaS}}{{\rm{O}}_4} + {\rm{C}}{{\rm{H}}_4}\ \rightarrow {\rm{CaC}}{{\rm{O}}_3} + {{\rm{H}}_2}{\rm{S}} + {{\rm{H}}_2}{\rm{O}} \end{equation*}$$

Preliminary modelling using PHREEQC showed that this process may give rise to water high in Ca and low in SO4, but there is no removal of Na. It must also be remembered that anhydrite is found in the Rotliegend sandstone not only as an early-stage evaporite mineral but also as a late- or intermediate-stage diagenetic mineral (Purvis, Reference Purvis1992; Lanson et al., Reference Lanson, Beaufort, Berger, Baradat and Lacharpagne1996; Gluyas et al., Reference Gluyas, Jolley and Primmer1997; Gaupp & Okkerman, Reference Gaupp and Okkerman2011). The environmental conditions for the intermediate diagenesis are, however, not clear: the effects of uplift or mixing of groundwater close to faults have not been elucidated. It is unknown whether conversion from calcite or aragonite to dolomite happened, which would not only explain enrichment of Ca above the seawater evaporation line but also depletion of Mg below. An entirely different explanation is that the seawater composition has varied over geological time, where it is, for example, assumed that Cretaceous seawater was enriched in Ca and depleted in Na, Mg and SO4 relative to present-day seawater (Bonnesen et al., Reference Bonnesen, Larsen, Sonnenborg, Klitten and Stemmerik2009).

Trace element concentrations

Iodine and selenium are interesting in the context of subsurface disposal of radioactive waste. All the data available on these two elements refer to the deep, buried aquifers. Our dataset contains only seven analyses for Se: five of them have a concentration below the detection limit of 1−2 µg l−1; the other two also have concentrations below 1 µg l−1, which is not far from the natural concentration in shallow groundwater and is below the seawater concentration (Table 4). Thus, little can be said about Se in aquifers of Oligocene and older age. Thirteen analyses are available for iodine, with most samples referring to hypersaline water and all samples plotting above the seawater I/Cl ratio (Fig. 6). The I concentration varies by two orders of magnitude and is roughly related to salinity. These groundwater samples are also enriched relative to the seawater ratio. The two groundwater samples from the Palaeogene Rupel and Cretaceous Houthem Formations at Asten show high concentrations above 10 mg l−1. The other samples originate from the Palaeogene Dongen aquifer at Nieuweschans (2.5/3.7 mg l−1), the Carboniferous aquifers in Limburg (0.07−1.3 mg l−1) and the salt diapirs (1.3−12 mg l−1). It is generally accepted that iodine in groundwater mostly originates from degradation of predominantly marine plants, as the related organic compounds contain iodine, although the potential role of carbonates has often been overlooked (Heymann, Reference Heymann1925; Krul, Reference Krul1933; Geirnaert, Reference Geirnaert1973; Claret et al., Reference Claret, Lerouge, Laurioux, Bizi, Conte, Ghestem, Wille, Sato, Gaucher, Giffaut and Tournassat2010; Li et al., Reference Li, Wang, Guo, Xie, Zhang, Liu and Kong2014). The present observations confirm that in deep groundwater I is due more to mobilisation from the sediment than to a seawater origin, where marine sediments are often present in Palaeogene and older formations.

Table 4. Statistical data on concentrations (μg l−1) of trace elements in groundwater of Oligocene and older formations in the Netherlands compared to seawater (as derived from Hem, Reference Hem1970) and the Dutch natural background concentration limits for shallow groundwater (INS, 1997).

$ Van der Weiden (Reference Van der Weiden1983) did not provide a quantitative value for his detection limits; for Zn, neglecting these samples or assuming a detection limit below this median value yields a similar median value

The number of analyses for other trace elements varies, with as many as 28 for Li. Most analyses refer to the deep, buried aquifers and for Li, Zn, Cu and B to reservoirs in South-Holland as well. Trace metals in groundwater are relevant with respect to environmental and human toxicity. Table 4 presents a statistical summary of the data. Considerable numbers of analyses lie below the detection limits, which sometimes vary considerably. The maximum concentrations observed are usually at least one order of magnitude larger than the related seawater concentrations, which can be up to 200 times higher (Se) than the Dutch background concentration limit for shallow, fresh groundwater or down to 50 times lower (Cr, Pb). Most remarkable are Pb and Zn, which exceed the seawater concentration or national background concentration limit by more than a factor of 1000. They are followed by Cr, Cu and I. The median concentrations usually lie within a factor of 5 from both the national background concentration limit and the seawater concentration. An exception is I, with a factor 30 above the seawater concentration. Lithium, boron and fluoride show high concentrations in an absolute sense, but this is common in seawater as well as in Dutch shallow saline groundwater of marine origin (Frapporti et al., Reference Frapporti, Vriend and Van Gaans1996).

A comparison with other field studies on oilfield brines indicates that the medians in our data are similar to those found by Rittenhouse et al. (Reference Rittenhouse, Fulton III, Grabowski and Bernard1969) for Co, Cr, Cu, Ni, Sn, Ti and V. Collins (Reference Collins1969) found higher maximum concentrations for Li and B concentrations, and Rittenhouse et al. (Reference Rittenhouse, Fulton III, Grabowski and Bernard1969) found higher median concentrations for Li. Our maxima for Pb, Zn and Cu (found in hypersaline reservoir samples) are extremely high, as Kharaka and Hanor (Reference Kharaka, Hanor and Drever2004) state that the concentrations of heavy metals in oilfield waters are generally below 100 µg l−1 because they are limited by the low solubilities of their respective sulphide minerals. These high concentrations are assumed to originate from redbed sands, which have a terrestrial origin and little reduced sulphur (Carpenter, Reference Carpenter1989; Kharaka & Hanor, Reference Kharaka, Hanor and Drever2004). Aqueous complexing of heavy metals with Cl may further raise the solubility of their sulphides. Coetsiers et al. (Reference Coetsiers, Blaser, Martens and Walraevens2009) present natural background concentrations for brackish and saline (Na + Cl > 1000 mg l−1) groundwater in Eocene marine aquifers in Flanders, which are defined as the 90-percentile value, i.e. close to the maximum concentration found. Their values lie within a factor 5 from our median values, except for B, which in their study is only 2.34 µg l−1. Their 90-percentile values are thus much lower than our maximum concentrations, whereas the deposits refer to comparable geological conditions. Conti et al. (Reference Conti, Sacchi, Chiarle, Martinelli and Zuppi2000) report high maximum concentrations for a few trace elements (As, Se, V, Sb) in saline groundwater originating from evaporated seawater trapped in the Late Messinian.

Conclusions

We have given an overview of the composition of Dutch groundwater in Palaeogene and older formations by synthesising existing, published chemical analyses. The data refer to both groundwater aquifers and oil or gas reservoirs. These units lie below the geohydrological base level in most parts of the Netherlands. It appears that piezometric heads lie above the ground under natural conditions for these aquifers, and the oil and gas reservoirs are overpressurised. Advective flow is currently low or absent if the formations are deeply buried (>400 m depth).

The groundwater is generally saline or hypersaline. Chloride concentrations below 1000 mg l−1 are found down to a maximum of 500 m depth in Carboniferous to Palaeogene aquifers that lie near the eastern and southern borders of the Netherlands, where outcrops of these deposits are not far away. Chloride concentrations above the seawater concentration of 19,000 mg l−1 occur frequently in reservoirs and buried aquifers in the northern half of the Netherlands and less frequently in the southern half. The highly saline groundwater is related to the major occurrence of Permian and Triassic evaporite deposits in this part of the Netherlands. Due to the occurrence of salt diapirs, hypersaline groundwater can also be found in Palaeogene aquifers. Chloride concentrations of 100,000−200,000 mg l−1 have only been observed frequently in the Permian and Triassic reservoirs or at diapirs. Analyses that reveal insights into the hydrological and geochemical processes determining the salinity of groundwater are lacking for almost all the available data: better insights would be obtained if tracers such as Br and the isotopes δ2H–H2O, δ18O–H2O and δ37Cl were analysed frequently. In general, it cannot be concluded with certainty whether the hypersaline reservoir waters originate from residual brines or dissolution of rock salt, but based on the few analyses of these tracers it seems plausible that the salinity in the South-Holland reservoirs is controlled by dissolution of rock salt plus diffusion. Some of the several saline samples from Palaeogene and older aquifers have a Cl to Br ratio that deviates from the seawater dilution/evaporation line, suggesting a contribution from rock salt dissolution, whereas some others do not deviate, suggesting a seawater origin for the high Cl concentration.

The pH is almost always near-neutral and the redox state is always anaerobic where there has often been extensive SO4 reduction. Most groundwaters are saturated or supersaturated in carbonates (but the values may be negatively influenced by erroneous pH measurement due to sampling limitations); anhydrite saturation occurs in hypersaline groundwater, and near-saturation in halite occurs when the Cl concentration is close to 200,000 mg l−1. The groundwater in the aquifers is usually freshening, as indicated by the ratios of Na to Cl and Ca to alkalinity. The few existing 14C analyses indicate that groundwater from the buried aquifers has an apparent age exceeding 20,000 years.

Limited data are available for trace metals, with median values lying close to those for seawater and natural background concentrations; however, maximum concentrations can be up to three orders of magnitude higher. The iodide concentrations lie above the seawater ratio relative to Cl, which implies that mobilisation has occurred due to degradation of organic matter of marine origin and/or the dissolution of carbonates.

Acknowledgements

The research leading to these results received funding from the Dutch research programme on geological disposal OPERA. OPERA is financed by the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs and the public limited liability company Elektriciteits-Produktiemaatschappij Zuid-Nederland (EPZ) and coordinated by COVRA. Three reviewers and the associate editor Dr M.E. Donselaar are thanked for their comments and suggestions that improved the manuscript. The language editor was J. Burrough.

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Figure 0

Fig. 1. Map of the Netherlands showing structural elements (after Kombrink et al., 2012) and the well locations, with inside map showing the areal extent of Zechstein salt and the regions referred to in the text.

Figure 1

Table 1. The main permeable units in Palaeogene and older formations in the Netherlands (major oil and gas reservoirs in bold and italic; compiled from Bless, 1981; Verweij, 2003; Wong et al., 2007).

Figure 2

Fig. 2. Relationship between the Cl concentration and the difference between the saturation indices of halite (above) and anhydrite (below) as calculated according to the Pitzer and regular procedures for the dataset considered.

Figure 3

Table 2. Statistical characteristics of the groundwater composition (mg l−1, with alkalinity as mg HCO3 l−1) for the three categories distinguished. Only medians are given for data series ranging from 5 to 20 samples.

Figure 4

Table 3. Groundwater analyses (mg l−1, except when stated otherwise) for samples from buried aquifers and the reservoirs in South-Holland that may include isotope analysis, plus the reference for groundwater close to rock salt in Gorleben, Germany (Kimpe, 1963; Glasbergen, 1981, 1984, 1985; Van der Weiden, 1983; Heederik, 1989; Eggenkamp, 1994; Kloppmann et al., 2001; Griffioen, 2015).

Figure 5

Fig. 3. Concentration plots of the compounds Na (above) and SO4 (below) vs Cl for groundwater in the shallow, semi-confined aquifers. Note the different kinds of scale axes. See Figure 1 for a map with the geographical names used.

Figure 6

Fig. 4. Chloride concentration vs depth for groundwater in the Carboniferous aquifer in the coal-mining district of southern Limburg (data obtained from Kimpe, 1963).

Figure 7

Fig. 5. Chloride vs sodium concentration plot for groundwater in deep, buried aquifers or oil and gas reservoirs (one fresh, relatively shallow sample from central Limburg lies outside the graph).

Figure 8

Fig. 6. Bromide, Li, I and B concentrations vs chloride as present for a limited series of samples together with the results of isotope analysis of H2O in some saline samples (the average for Dutch rainwater is shown for comparison, and GMWL stands for global meteoric water line). Samples with 100 µg Li l−1 refer to analyses below detection limit, which must be 100 µg l−1 or smaller. Seawater evaporation pathways according to data from Fontes & Matray (1993a).

Figure 9

Fig. 7. Concentration plots of the main compounds SO4, Ca, Mg and K vs Cl for samples from the deep, buried aquifers and the reservoirs at linear (left) and logarithmic scale (right). Seawater evaporation pathways according to data from Fontes & Matray (1993a). The mixing line represents mixing between a freshwater type and halite brine.

Figure 10

Fig. 8. Alkalinity to Ca ratio vs the Cl concentration for samples from the three data groups.

Figure 11

Fig. 9. Saturation indices of halite, anhydrite, calcite and siderite vs the Cl concentration of groundwater for samples from the three data groups. Note the different scales of the x/y-axes.

Figure 12

Fig. 10. Strontium (with solubility line for celestite; above) and Ba (with that for barite; below) concentrations vs the SO4 concentration for a limited series of samples from the deep, buried aquifers and the reservoirs.

Figure 13

Table 4. Statistical data on concentrations (μg l−1) of trace elements in groundwater of Oligocene and older formations in the Netherlands compared to seawater (as derived from Hem, 1970) and the Dutch natural background concentration limits for shallow groundwater (INS, 1997).