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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Reservoir Quality and Pore-Type Evolution in Tertiary
Wilcox Sandstones of the Northern Texas Gulf of
Mexico Coast During Burial
Bureau of Economic Geology, Jackson
School of Geosciences, The University
of Texas at Austin
As the search for gas in the Gulf of Mexico focuses increasingly on reservoirs at depths more than 4.5 kilometers (14,750 feet), the most critical yet unknown risk factor is reservoir quality. Petrographic analysis of Wilcox sandstones on the upper Texas coastal plain provides insight into the evolution of porosity and permeability during burial that is useful in the exploration for deep reservoirs both onshore and in the Gulf of Mexico.
Wilcox sandstones are mainly lithic arkoses and
feldspathic litharenites that have an average
composition of Q59F22R19 (quartz-feldsparrock
fragment). Provenance did not change
significantly during Wilcox deposition in this
area, nor does average sandstone composition vary among lower,
middle, and upper Wilcox sandstones. However, lowstand slopefan
deposits contain more rock fragments (mainly metamorphic
and volcanic) than do deposits from highstand or transgressive
systems
tracts
. Wilcox sandstones deposited in deepwater
environments in the Gulf of Mexico are likely to contain more
rock fragments than do their linked highstand equivalents.
With increasing burial depth, total volume of porosity decreases
and the proportion of different pore
types
changes. Average coreanalysis
porosity declines from 35% at a depth of 0.4 kilometers
(1,300 feet) to 10.7% at a depth of 4.5 kilometers (14,750 feet).
Pores
types
change from a mix of primary, secondary, and micropores
(P35S38M27) at shallower depths to predominantly
secondary pores and micropores in deeper sandstones
(P7S35M58). At a burial depth of 3.5 kilometers (11,500 feet),
most primary pores have been lost by physical compaction or
occluded by quartz cementation, and secondary pores generated
by feldspar dissolution compose the majority of macropores.
Average permeability decreases from 976 millidarcies at a depth
of 0.4 kilometers (1,300 feet) to 0.2 millidarcies at a depth of 4.5
kilometers (14,750 feet). Because most deep sandstones are
dominated by secondary pores and micropores, the porositypermeability
transforms for deep and ultradeep sandstones will
have lower slopes than those for shallower sandstones.
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