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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Facies Types and Diagenetic Aspects
of an Upper Glen Rose Stratigraphic Trap:
Alabama Ferry Field, Leon County, Texas
By
The sparsely drilled eastern portion of Leon County,
Texas was the site of the significant 1983 discovery of
Alabama Ferry Field. The field produces from a shoal
complex with three main porosity zones in a portion of the
Upper Glen Rose section that is equivalent to the " D zone
of the Ft. Trinidad Field. Since the discovery of this
stratigraphic hap, over 200 wells have been completed in
the "Dm zone on approximately 40,000 acres. The field has
been estimated to contain nearly 100 million barrels of oil
and 200 BCF of gas in place. To date, over 6 million barrels
of oil and 13 BCF of gas have been produced under a
restricted allowable. The size of the field and
quality
of the
reservoir rocks has and will continue to make this stratigraphic
interval an attractive exploration target along the
Glen Rose shelf.
The interplay of dominant particle type, depositional
texture and diagenesis controls reservoir
quality
. Grainstones,
and some packstones, composed of skeletal
(mollusk), intraclast and ooid particle types, are the principal
reservoir facies. Some of these grainstone units are dominated
by one particle type, while other units contain a
variable mixture of the three main allochemical components,
as well as accessory amounts of peloids, foraminifera,
echinoderm and calcareous algae fragments, and other
framework constituents. Grainstone facies trends vary
from east to west across the field.
Skeletal grainstones dominate the eastern portion of the field in a roughly north-south belt, while intraclast, ooid, skeletal, and mixed grainstone subfacies are spread across the broad western portion of the field, where these zones thin and pinch out.
The best reservoir-
quality
rock is skeletal grainstone,
which usually contains interparticle and well-developed
moldic porosity, intraclast and ooid grainstone end members
are good and moderate to poor reservoir reek types,
respectively, with principally interparticle porosity and
microporosity. Microporosity, often found within ooids and
micritic grains, is associated with relatively higher irreducible
water
saturations and less effective pore systems (lower
permeability). The overall reservoir
quality
of the different
mixed-particle subfacies is often dependent on the proportion
of dissolution-prone skeletal fragments, which control
the distribution of moldic porosity.
Three major zones of porosity have been delineated in
the field. The lowermost zone of porosity is a widely
distributed grainstone unit of variable thickness. The best
reservoir-
quality
rocks in this lowermost unit are skeletal
and intraclast-rich grainstones. The better defined middle
zone is a roughly north-south-trending shoal system in the
eastern part of the field. This zone contains porous skeletal-rich
grainstones, with less porous ooid and intraclast
grainstone facies also noted. The uppermost zone is
somewhat similar in overall geometry to the lowermost
zone. Skeletal-rich and intraclast-rich grainstones are the
best
quality
reservoir rock in this uppermost zone. These
porous lithofacies occur along the southwestern edge of the
field.
The suite of pore types and diagenetic events in
Alabama Ferry Field are similar to many Lower Cretaceous
carbonate reservoirs in the Gulf Coast province. Interparticle
and early-formed moldic pore spaces are commonly
lined with marine and meteoric phreatic calcite cements.
Compaction, in several forms, can have a major effect on
reservoir
quality
; micro/macrostylolization, primarily in
intraclast and ooid grainstones, has reduced porosity
through volume reduction of interparticle pore space and
through the release of calcite in solution, which reprecipitates
locally as spar cement. The amount of calcite spar
cement in these compacted intervals can, in some cases,
result in almost complete occlusion of pores. Even without
significant compaction, porosity in some skeletal grainstones
with formerly high interparticle and moldic pore volume can be greatly reduced
by a combination of calcite spar and baroque dolomite cements. Throughout the
field,
variable amounts of baroque dolomite, as well as accessory
anhydrite and authigenic quartz, occur as late-stage cement
types. Brittle collapse of interparticle and moldic pores may
also reduce pore volume, but can enhance permeability;
fractures are sparse and contribute little to reservoir pore
volume or permeability.
As with many carbonate grainstone reservoirs, optimum
facies, combined with porosity enhancement and
preservation, are the main controls on reservoir
quality
in
the shoal complex at Alabama Ferry Field.
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