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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Porosity Formation Beneath Subaerial
Unconformities in the Lisburne
Field
,
Prudhoe Bay, Alaska
Field
,
Prudhoe Bay, AlaskaBy
Exxon Ventures (CIS) Inc., Houston
Five major regional unconformities are present within the Lisburne Group carbonates at Prudhoe Bay. All show erosional truncation but differ in origin, sediment response, length of exposure, and diagenesis. Economically significant porosity is associated with three of the five unconformities; the pre-upper Permian unconformity (PUPU), the lower Cretaceous unconformity (LCU), and the mid-Mississippian unconformity (MMU).
Both the LCU and PUPU are high-angle,
erosional surfaces formed during
long periods of regional exposure
associated with major tectonic events.
Neither surface preserves signs of early
porosity development. The lack of relief
along both of these surfaces within
the Prudhoe Bay region suggests that
transgression after exposure removed
any early porosity that may have been
present. Karstic breccias lacking porosity
are present below the PUPU in outcrop
150 miles (300 km) away. Petrographic
and geochemical data indicate
porosity is late, formed during burial
and expulsion of fluids from overlying
thick marine shales. Local tectonics and
paleogeographical
setting
are likely to
have been important in focusing fluid
flow into the Lisburne carbonates in the
Prudhoe Bay
structure
.
The other three unconformities are more likely to be of eustatic origin. These differ greatly in sediment response, length of exposure, and amount of preserved porosity. While signs of subaerial exposure are present along all unconformities, only the MMU shows significant porosity in peritidal dolomites immediately beneath the unconformity surface. Intercrystalline porosity in the dolomites is related to widespread peritidal facies and does not show clear evidence of diagenetic processes related to the unconformity. Thus, porosity development beneath unconformities of eustatic origin is most closely related to the distribution of facies tracts at the close of major depositional sequences. In summary, near-surface diagenetic processes have not been important in creating porosity at unconformity surfaces in the Lisburne carbonates at Prudhoe Bay. However, significant burial dissolution and dolomitization has occurred along unconformities of tectonic origin. Predicting porosity associated with these surfaces relies on understanding the structural evolution of the Prudhoe Bay region.
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