GeoRessources (CNRS-Université de Lorraine, France)

GeoRessources (CNRS-Université de Lorraine, France)

The GeoRessources Laboratory brings together Nancy’s most important players in the field of Applied Geology. It is hosted by the University of Lorraine, and has two supervising institutions, the University of Lorraine and CNRS, and one industrial partner, the CREGU. GeoRessources employs a total of 180 personnel and orientates itself around three main research themes:

“GeoModels” is a meeting-place for specialists in geometrical, geostatistical and physical-process modelling. The objectives are to forge strong collaborations between experts in digital and experimental simulation and to unite geometrical, inverse, hydrogeochemical and mechanical approaches.

“Raw Materials” is a place for interaction and exchange between experts in the exploration, exploitation and treatment of carbon and mineral resources. Geologists, geochemists, metallogenists and mineralogists can interact freely with one another. The ‘Raw Materials’ mission is to develop models that explore upstream and downstream resource cycles.

“GeoSystems” is a synergistic space that hosts experts in underground exploitation for the storage of waste and geothermal energy, as well as specialists in the hazards and risks associated with anthropogenic activity such as mining and excavation.

Because the field of resource exploitation is developing like never before, it is essential that specialists from across the different research themes work together in finding new ways to minimize the environmental impact of resource exploitation.

The Geomodels and Geosystems themes conduct interdisciplinary research concerned with the use and management of the surface and sub-surface environment, with a strong focus on the safety of underground structures. Applications address local and national socio-economic issues, including geotechnics, environmental protection, and the surface and sub-surface storage of waste, CO2 and H2. The originality of the team’s work lies in addressing these issues from the points of view of hydrodynamics and transfer mechanisms, as well as from poro-mechanics and geochemical perspectives.

Scientific goals of the Raw Materials theme concern a better understanding of: i) metals concentrations associated with crustal growth and evolution within the frame of plate tectonics (multimethod approach combining field geology, structural analysis, petrology, geochemistry, geochronology), ii) the processes governing the extraction of metals from rock sources, their transport by fluid phases (speciation, especially through experimental studies, and spectroscopic monitoring, fluid origin), and iii) ore formation (PVTX reconstruction through integrated paleo-fluid studies (microthermometry, Raman, spectroscopy, LA-ICP-MS), thermodynamic and experimental modeling dating of ore stages), the overall data yielding to conceptual and numerical modelling of the genesis of ore deposits within their geologic and geodynamic contexts.

View datasets associated with lab.