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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 71 (1987)

Issue: 6. (June)

First Page: 633

Last Page: 642

Title: Assessing the Relative Importance of Compaction Processes and Cementation to Reduction of Previous HitPorosityNext Hit in Sandstones

Author(s): David W. Houseknecht (2)

Abstract:

At the depositional surface, well-sorted sand has approximately 40% Previous HitporosityNext Hit. During burial diagenesis, that Previous HitporosityNext Hit is reduced by mechanical compaction, intergranular pressure solution, and cementation. Mechanical compaction and intergranular pressure solution can both be considered compactional processes because they irreversibly reduce the intergranular volume of sand. In contrast, cementation occludes, but does not reduce, intergranular volume.

The relative importance of compactional processes and cementation to Previous HitporosityNext Hit reduction can be quantified using a graph of intergranular volume vs. cement. This diagram can be used to evaluate which diagenetic processes have been most influential to intergranular Previous HitporosityNext Hit reduction and to determine why some sandstones retain better Previous HitreservoirNext Hit quality than others. The diagram can also be used to reconstruct pathways taken by sandstones during burial diagenesis.

Results of applying this technique to data from the Nugget Previous HitSandstoneNext Hit and Bromide Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit (Simpson Group) indicate that mechanical compaction and intergranular pressure solution were much more important than cementation in determining ultimate Previous HitporosityNext Hit. Moreover, the best Previous HitporosityNext Hit is preserved in samples that have undergone the least intergranular pressure solution. These conclusions emphasize the importance of integrating an evaluation of these compactional processes into analyses of Previous HitreservoirTop sandstones and into models of burial diagenesis.

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