Carbon Capture, Use and Storage: UK potential
Fractured outcrop analogues for dual porosity geothermal systems
The Humbly Grove, Herriard and Hester’s Copse fields, UK Onshore
Enhanced Oil Recovery as a second revenue stream in a gas storage facility; understanding and monitoring the Humbly Grove Field, Hampshire, UK
Characterising Fractured Basement Reservoirs
Characterising and understanding fractures, karstification, and surface fissures related to active rifting: processes and implications for geothermal reservoir development
Humbly Grove gas storage – does the Earth move?
Application of material balance methods to CO2 storage capacity estimation within selected depleted gas reservoirs
Importance of Outcrop Analogues for Predicting Fluid Flow in Fractured Rock: Lessons from Hydrocarbon Exploration & Production
Natural seismogenic pumping processes in near surface fractured basement gneisses
The fluid transport and storage properties of fractured crystalline rocks are relevant to understanding water and hydrocarbon resources and potential containment of radioactive materials and carbon dioxide. Crystalline lithologies have virtually non-existent primary porosity therefore any porosity and permeability is secondary, originating from fractures and/or surface weathering. Here, we report upon a study on the…
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