GEOMODELS-Lab - GEOMODELS Analogue Modelling Laboratory (Geomodels Research Institute, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain)

GEOMODELS-Lab - GEOMODELS Analogue Modelling Laboratory (Geomodels Research Institute, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain)

The analogue modelling laboratory of the Geomodels Research Institute (http://www.ub.edu/geomodels/Obj_en_Lab_mod.html) was stablished in 2009 thanks to a scientific infrastructure (UNBA08-4E-006) co-funded by the European Regional Development Fund (FEDER) of the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación of the Spanish Government and Statoil. It is integrated in the Geological Simulations Laboratory (SIMGEO) of the Facultat de Ciències de la Terra (Universitat de Barcelona). GEOMODELS-Lab was designed to complement the main research lines on structural geology, tectonics and 3D reconstruction/modelling of geological bodies carried out at the Geomodels Research Institute. It is currently supported by different research projects with oil companies (Consortium ConocoPhilips, Tarim Oil, Repsol, etc…). In terms of research, the laboratory is open to collaborations with other institutions, both public or private. It is also used with an educational purpose in BSc. and MSc. courses taught at the Facultat de Ciències de la Terra of the UB. In 2017 we edited the special issue “Analog modelling as an aid to structural interpretation” of the Interpretation journal and in October 2018 we hosted the GeoMod conference.

The GEOMODELS-Lab consists of three modular experimental rigs, a slicing machine and complementary equipment such as a scanner, photography cameras, a 3D printer and minor devices. The experimental rigs were designed to emulate a wide variety of tectonic settings as thin- and thick-skinned extension or compression, tectonic inversion, salt tectonics and strike-slip deformation. The deformation is applied to the experiments by servomotors run by a digital controller which is continuously monitored by a computer. The data capture is carried out by lateral, oblique and overhead digital time-lapsed photographs that are complemented by a high-resolution white light scan (SIDIO XP) which captures micrometric variations on the topography. The experiments are cut with a slicing machine in homogeneous and equidistant sections of 3 mm-thick. General and detailed photographs are taken for each section, that are used subsequently to create 3D voxels that can be sliced in any direction. These photographs can be also converted to virtual seismic cubes that are interpreted with Petrel, Kingdom Suite or Gocad. The evolution of the experiments can be also analyzed using PIV techniques (La Vision).

Please, find further information in http://www.ub.edu/geomodels/Obj_en_Lab_mod.html

View datasets associated with lab.