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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract:
Diagenetic
Controls Over Porosity Distribution
in Ancient Carbonate-Rock Sequences


By
The distribution of original porosity in carbonate-rock sequences at the time of deposition is a function of textures and fabrics controlled by processes in the depositional environment. Carbonate sequences representing high-energy environments such as beaches, marine bars, and tidal channels can be expected to have high original porosity because of their relatively coarse, well-washed textures. This relation between original depositional environment and pore-space distribution leads to a basic exploration strategy widely utilized both in quartzose clastic and carbonate provinces.
In carbonate-rock sequences, however, the ultimate
nature and distribution of porosity commonly are the
result of diagenetic
processes that act either to occlude primary porosity or to generate secondary porosity during
the postdepositional history of the sequence. Three ancient carbonate-rock sequences illustrate
diagenetic
controls
over ultimate porosity distribution.
A localized carbonate-sand sequence in the Lower Cretaceous Edwards of west-central Texas is a well-developed beach sequence which has undergone extensive syngenetic diagenesis. The present pore system is entirely secondary, having been generated by preferential solution after the general occlusion of its primary pore system by early cementation and silicification. The final pore-space distribution of the carbonate beach is completely independent of original depositional textures.
Lower Cretaceous shelf-edge rudist-reef sequences long have been exploration targets along the northern and western Gulf margin, and much of the success has been confined to the western or Mexican part of the trend. In general terms, exploration of the Texas and central Gulf has confirmed the trend of the Stuart City rudist shelf-edge sequence, but little commercial porosity development has been found. Studies of similar sequences In exposures in central Texas and Mexico indicate that early syngenetic diagenesis acts to occlude most original porosity in rudist-reef sequences, and that exposure to fresh water prior to mineral stabilization is probably necessary for the generation of significant secondary porosity. Studies of the subsurface Stuart City trend have developed little evidence for significant freshwater influence during its burial history; this may explain its general lack of commercial secondary porosity.
The Jurassic Smackover in southern Arkansas appears
to be a classic stratigraphic trap in carbonate rock with
original porosity preservation, and the trapping mechanism
appears to be porosity pinchout into nonporous
lagoonal-mud facies. In reality, however, the Smackover
porosity occlusion is by cementation, and porosity distribution
is controlled by diagenetic
processes rather than
environmental parameters. Primary porosity is preserved
preferentially in the vadose zone associated with pens
contemporaneous salt tectonics.
It is clear from these examples that exploration-exploitation
strategies in carbonate provinces must utilize
the concept of total rock history, taking into account both
depositional and diagenetic
regional trends and models in
any attempt to predict the distribution of potential reservoir
rocks.
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