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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Original and Secondary Pores in Sedimentary Reservoir Rocks:
Relationship to CaCO3 Cements
By
Retention of original pore space, development
of secondary pores, and precipitation of CaCO3
cement in pores of sedimentary reservoir rocks are
the result of a delicate balance among organic processes,
composition of water and migration of fluids,
and the depositional and diagenetic history of calcium
carbonate sediment particles and carbonate
rocks. In a high-energy marine environment, where waves and currents impinge on the sediment particles,
original pore space may persist and thus may be
available in subsurface reservoirs. However, in
reefs, cements are precipitated early. Original pore
space will be preserved only if hydrocarbons are introduced
early, if shale seals off the reef from
migrating fluids, or if the reef is invaded by meteoric
waters undersaturated with respect to CaCO3. Where
reefs or mid and skeletal accumulations are subject
to leaching by meteoric water subaerially, in the
subsurface, or on the sea bottom near leaks of meteoric
water, leaching creates secondary (moldic)
pore space while solutions are undersaturated with
respect to CaCO3. These new secondary pore spaces
are added to the preserved original pores; they
increase the total porosity. In corals leaching begins in sclerodermites. The newly created pores
merge and form channels. In such leached corals porosity values may exceed the porosity values
found in corals of unleached modern reefs. Hence conditions for developing maximum pore space
include exposure of reefs or high-energy carbonate sands to meteoric waters. However, once
meteoric waters become saturated with respect to calcite, calcite cement is precipitated in the
pores. This cement progressively eliminates primary and secondary pores.
Under both surface and subsurface conditions, sulfate-reducing bacteria use sulfate from seawater,
or from meteoric or formation waters as an oxidant for that part of organic matter which
they oxidize for energy production. Calcite as a cement if formed when CO2 produced in the
bacterial oxidation of organic matter combines with calcium. CaS, an intermediate product in
sulfate reduction, hydrolizes, because it is not stable in aqueous solution, and in this
reaction the
pH rises. At high values of pH not only does calcite cement tend to be precipitated, but also
quartz particles tend to be peripherally corroded and ultimately replaced. Such cementation and
replacement of quartz by calcite have been observed in subaerially exposed sandstones 10,000 years
old, in subsurface reservoir rocks, and in modern beachrocks. Other bacteria form CO2 from
methane, such as that found in lagoonal sediments or tidal marshes and this CO2 can trigger precipitation
of carbonate cement in sediments lying on the sea floor or occurring in the subsurface. End_Pages 2 and 3---------------