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AAPG Bulletin

Abstract

(Begin page 301)

AAPG Bulletin, V. 86, No. 2 (February 2002), P. 301-328.

Copyright ©2002. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

Anomalously high Previous HitporosityNext Hit and Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit in deeply buried Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit reservoirs: Origin and predictability

Salman Bloch,1 Robert H. Lander,2 Linda Bonnell3

1Consultant, 3822 W. Clay Street, Houston, Texas, 77019; email: [email protected]
2Geocosm LLC, 6280 McNeil Drive #604, Austin, Texas, 78729; email: [email protected]
3Geocosm LLC, 6280 McNeil Drive #604, Austin, Texas, 78729; email: [email protected]

AUTHORS

Sal Bloch's main technical interests are predrill Previous HitpredictionNext Hit of reservoir quality, reservoir quality assessment, and Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit petrology. He received his Ph.D. from George Washington University, Washington, D.C., in 1978. Sal recently left Texaco to become a geological consultant. Prior to joining Texaco in 1997 he was employed by Norsk Hydro (consultant, 1995-1996), Arco (principal research geologist, 1982-1995), and the University of Oklahoma (geologist/adjunct professor, 1978-1982). He was a co-instructor in an SEPM Short Course on "Reservoir Quality Assessment and Previous HitPredictionNext Hit in Clastic Rocks" and a co-editor of AAPG Memoir 69, Reservoir Quality Previous HitPredictionNext Hit in Sandstones and Carbonates. He served six years as associate editor for the AAPG Bulletin and is currently an AAPG Distinguished Lecturer.

Rob Lander's research involves diagenetic and petrophysical modeling of sandstones. In 2000 he cofounded Geocosm, where he is a scientific advisor. He obtained a Ph.D. in geology from the University of Illinois in 1991 and worked for Exxon Production Research from 1990 to 1993. In 1993 he joined Rogaland Research in Stavanger, Norway, and cofounded a spin-off company, Geologica, where he held the position of technical director at the time of his departure in 2000.

Linda Bonnell received a Ph.D. in geology from the University of Illinois in 1990. After doing postdoctoral research at Washington University and Rice University, she took a position at Rogaland Research in Stavanger, Norway. From 1996 until 2000, she worked as a senior staff geologist for Geologica in Stavanger, Norway. In 2000, she cofounded Geocosm in Austin, Texas, where she specializes in reservoir quality Previous HitpredictionNext Hit and characterization.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Sal Bloch gratefully acknowledges Norsk Hydro's support (1995-1996) for his work on chlorite coats and Texaco's support for his work on the hydrocarbon emplacement and overpressure effects. Discussions with Ruth Elin Midtbo and Mogens Ramm (Norsk Hydro) during the course of this project and their review of an early version of the manuscript were very helpful. We are also grateful to Tom Dreyer and John Gjelberg (Norsk Hydro) for their sedimentologic interpretation of core from the key well discussed in the section on chlorite coats and to Johannes Rikkje (Norsk Hydro) for the backscattered electron images of chlorite-coated sands. Comments by Bill Almon (Texaco) on the effect of grain coating are greatly appreciated. AAPG reviewers Richard Larese and James Schmoker offered numerous suggestions that significantly improved the article. We also wish to express our appreciation to Norsk Hydro and Texaco, Inc. for their permission to publish this article.

ABSTRACT

Previous HitPorosityNext Hit and Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit generally decrease with increasing depth (thermal exposure and effective pressure); however, a significant number of deep (>4 km [approximately 13,000 ft]) Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit reservoirs worldwide are characterized by anomalously high Previous HitporosityNext Hit and Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit. Anomalous Previous HitporosityNext Hit and Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit can be defined as being statistically higher than the Previous HitporosityNext Hit and Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit values occurring in typical Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit reservoirs of a given lithology (composition and texture), age, and burial/temperature history. In sandstones containing anomalously high porosities, such porosities exceed the maximum Previous HitporosityNext Hit of the typical Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit subpopulation.

Major causes of anomalous Previous HitporosityNext Hit and Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit were identified decades ago; however, quantification of the effect of processes responsible for anomalous Previous HitporosityNext Hit and Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit and the assessment of the predictability of anomalous Previous HitporosityNext Hit and Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit occurrence in subsurface sandstones have rarely been addressed in published literature. The focus of this article is on quantification and predictability of three major causes of anomalously high Previous HitporosityNext Hit: (1) grain coats and grain rims, (2) early emplacement of hydrocarbons, and (3) shallow development of fluid overpressure.

Grain coats and grain rims retard quartz cementation and concomitant Previous HitporosityNext Hit and Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit reduction by inhibiting precipitation of quartz overgrowths on detrital-quartz grains. Currently, Previous HitpredictionNext Hit of anomalous Previous HitporosityNext Hit associated with grain coats and grain rims is dependent on the availability of empirical data sets. In the absence of adequate empirical data, sedimentologic and diagenetic models can be helpful in assessing risk due to reservoir quality. Such models provide a means to evaluate the effect of geologic constraints on coating occurrence and coating completeness required to preserve economically viable Previous HitporosityNext Hit and Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit (Begin page 302) in a given play or prospect. These constraints include thermal history and Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit grain size and composition.

The overall effect of hydrocarbon emplacement on reservoir quality is controversial. It appears that at least some cements (quartz and illite) may continue to precipitate following emplacement of hydrocarbons into the reservoir. Our work indicates that integration of basin modeling with reservoir quality modeling can be used to quantify, prior to drilling, the potential impact of hydrocarbon emplacement on Previous HitporosityNext Hit and Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit.

The best-case scenario for significant reservoir quality preservation due to fluid overpressure development is in rapidly deposited Tertiary or Quaternary sandstones. Our models suggest that significant Previous HitporosityNext Hit can be preserved in sandstones that have experienced continuous high fluid overpressures from shallow burial depths. The models also indicate that the potential for Previous HitporosityNext Hit preservation is greatest in ductile-grain-rich sandstones because compaction tends to be the dominant control on reservoir quality in such rocks. The case for significant Previous HitporosityNext Hit preservation associated with fluid overpressures in pre-Tertiary basins, however, is more problematic because of the complexities in the history of fluid overpressure and the greater significance of quartz cementation as a potential mechanism of Previous HitporosityTop loss.

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