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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: The Significance of Textural, Compositional, and
Diagenetic Interaction on Porosity Development in
Gulf Coast and Other Reservoir Sandstones
By
Porosity development in reservoir
sandstones is greatly influenced by diagenetic
processes which characteristically
are programmed by pre-burial conditions
of depositional facies and framework
composition
. Textural and mineralogical
characteristics can have a great
impact on discrete chemical and physical
diagenetic processes affecting the sand
body. Commonly, these effects (e.g.,
cementation, compaction) result in considerable
modification of pore space in
part or all of the sequence and significantly
influence exploration and
exploitation strategy.
Depositional Factors including lithology,
sedimentary structures, and
texture
(mainly grain size, sorting) have had a
pronounced effect on porosity development in Gulf Coast and other sandstones.
Commonly, discrete diagenetic
processes are segregated within
sandstone
sequences on the basis of grain size
trends attributed to variation in depositional
energy. In lower Miocene (offshore
Texas) and Jurassic Norphlet (offshore
Alabama) sandstones, physical and
chemical compaction effects are most
pronounced in finer-grained facies
resulting in irreversible porosity loss.
Chemical compaction (pressure solution)
processes in these intervals likely
provided an in situ source of silica and
carbonate cement which selectively precipitated
in adjacent/nearby coarser-grained
sandstone
intervals. In addition,
pressure solution effects on grain and stylolitic
scale along argillaceous/organic
bed laminae may result in the development of effective barriers to vertical fluid
flow in sandstones (e.g., Nubia, Gulf of
Suez).
Mineralogical
composition
of reservoir
sandstones is extremely critical to
effective porosity development, as framework
grains of contrasting
composition
behave differently with burial diagenesis.
Labile lithic fragments (volcanic, metamorphic,
sedimentary) may be subjected
to significant physical compaction by
ductile grain deformation. The degree
of porosity reduction by this mechanism
is governed by the type, abundance, and
distribution heterogeneity of lithic components
within the depositional environment.
In contrast, the alteration of particular
types of framework components
may aid in porosity preservation or
enhancement within a
sandstone
sequence. The selective dissolution of
detrital feldspar in lower Miocene sandstones
from Matagorda Island (offshore
Texas) accounts for up to 30% of total
effective porosity. Correspondingly, diagenetic alteration of minor amounts of
volcanic detritus (3-8 volume percent) in
several Tuscaloosa
Sandstone
intervals
(upper Cretaceous, Louisiana) has resulted
in the development of authigenic
chlorite coatings (5-13 volume percent)
which have preserved primary intergranular
interstices by inhibiting the precipitation
of quartz cement. Principal pre-burial
controls on
sandstone
composition
include provenance, transportation,
and mineral partitioning within
the depositional environment. In sedimentary
basins possessing a common
sediment source, the concentration of
framework components due to variations
in size, shape and density can result in
significant differences in the intensity of
diagenetic reactions and ultimately,
porosity distribution within a
sandstone
sequence.
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