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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
Porosity
Loss, Fluid Flow, and Mass Transfer in Limestone
Reservoirs: Application to the Upper Jurassic Smackover
Formation
, Mississippi1
1Manuscript received August 19, 1998; revised manuscript received April 26,
1999; final acceptance June 25, 1999.
2Mississippi Office of Geology, P.O. Box 20307, Jackson, Mississippi 39289.
ABSTRACT
Ooid grainstones of the Upper Jurassic Smack over
Formation
are buried to a depth of
over 6 km and exposed to temperatures in excess of 200°C at Black Creek field,
Mississippi. Combined effects of mechanical compaction, intergranular pressure solution,
and cementation have reduced intergranular
porosity
of these ooid grainstones to 0%,
indicating that
porosity
reduction has gone to completion. Modal analysis of 24 samples
lacking preburial cements indicates that from the original 40%
porosity
, 13
porosity
units
(range: 4 to 21) were lost by mechanical compaction, 15
porosity
units (range: 8 to 23)
were reduced by intergranular pressure solution, and 12
porosity
units (range: <1 to
26) were destroyed by cementation.
Intergranular pressure solution caused an average of 28% (range: 15 to 51%) vertical
shortening in Smackover ooid grainstones. Under ideal conditions, the 28% vertical
shortening will generate enough calcium
carbonate
to precipitate 10% calcite cement. This
is close to the measured volume of cements in Smackover grainstones (12%), suggesting that
intergranular pressure solution provided most of the calcite cement present. No external
sources of calcium
carbonate
are required.
Fine-grained samples that experienced high degrees of intergranular pressure solution
and contain only small amounts of cement occur at the top of the reservoir, whereas
coarse-grained samples with abundant cement and low degrees of pressure solution occur in
the middle and basal parts of the reservoir, suggesting that the fine-grained intervals
acted as sources and the coarse-grained intervals as sinks for calcium
carbonate
. Mass
transfer of pressure solution-generated calcium
carbonate
from the top of the unit to
precipitation sites in the middle and basal parts of the reservoir could have occurred by
a non-Rayleigh-type convection cell. Due to calcite's reverse solubility with respect to
temperature, the cooling, upward-moving limb of the convection cell would become
progressively more undersaturated, and hence able to transport more dissolved calcium
carbonate
released by intergranular pressure solution in the upper portion of the
reservoir. Pore fluids descending in the downward-moving limb of the cell would become
progressively more supersaturated, and calcium
carbonate
would tend to precipitate as
cement in the middle and basal parts of the reservoir as fluids become progressively
hotter.
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