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Abstract

AAPG Bulletin, V. 87, No. 11 (November 2003), P. 1755-1778.

Copyright copy2003. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

How burial diagenesis of chalk sediments controls sonic velocity and porosity

Ida L. Fabricius1

1E amp R, Technical University of Denmark b. 115, DK-2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark; email: [email protected]

AUTHORS

Ida Lykke Fabricius is associate professor at the Technical University of Denmark. Her main responsibilities are teaching and research in petrophysics and reservoir geology. Ida received an M.S. degree in geology in 1981 from the University of Copenhagen. She worked for Maeligrsk Oil and Gas until 1985, when she joined the Technical University of Denmark. She received a Ph.D. in applied geology in 1988.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This research used samples and data provided by the Ocean Drilling Program, which is sponsored by the U.S. National Science Foundation and participating countries under the management of the Joint Oceanographic Institutions. Amerada Hess and Maeligrsk Olie og Gas kindly provided North Sea chalk samples. The Danish Energy Agency Project "Rock Physics of Chalk" provided financial support. The Rock Physics Group at Stanford University is thanked for its hospitality in the summer of 2000.

M. Borre, M. Delaney, J. Dvorkin, P. Frykman, R. Jakobsen, P. Japsen, A. Krogsboslashll, M. W. Longman, G. Mavko, T. Mukerji, M. Prasad, E. A. Silver, S. Stipp, O. V. Vejbaeligk, and B. Ward are thanked for valuable discussions and comments. Technical assistance from Birte Brejl, Hector Diaz, and Flemming Kragh at the Technical University of Denmark is acknowledged.

ABSTRACT

Based on P-wave velocity and density data, a new Previous HitelasticTop model for chalk sediments is established. The model allows the construction of a series of isoframe (IF) curves, each representing a constant part of the mineral phase contributing to the solid frame.

The IF curves can be related to the progress of burial diagenesis of chalk, which is revised as follows:

Newly deposited carbonate ooze and mixed sediments range in porosity from 60 to 80%, depending on the prevalence of hollow microfossils. Despite the high porosity, these sediments are not in suspension, as reflected in IFs of 0.1 or higher.

Upon burial, the sediments lose porosity by mechanical compaction, and concurrently, the calcite particles recrystallize into progressively more equant shapes. High compaction rates may keep the particles in relative motion, whereas low compaction rates allow the formation of contact cement, whereby IF increases and chalk forms. Rock mechanical tests show that when compaction requires more than in-situ stress, porosity reduction is arrested.

During subsequent burial, crystals and pores grow in size as a consequence of the continuing recrystallization. The lack of porosity loss during this process testifies to the absence of chemical compaction by calcite-calcite pressure dissolution, as well as to the porosity-preserving effect of contact cementation.

At sufficient burial stress, the presence of stylolites indicates that pressure dissolution takes place between calcite and silicates, and depending on pore-water chemistry and temperature, pore-filling cementation may occur over a relatively short depth interval. Limestone and mixed sedimentary rock form, and porosity may be reduced to less than 20%. Isoframe increases to more than 0.6.

In hydrocarbon reservoirs in North Sea chalk, relatively high porosity and high IFs are found. The reason may be that recrystallization and porosity-preserving contact cementation progress, whereas pore-filling cementation is small, probably because pressure dissolution along stylolites is arrested. Pressure dissolution may be arrested for two reasons: (1) the introduction of hydrocarbons causes a fall in effective burial stress, and (2) adsorption of polar hydrocarbons on the silicates may shield calcite from the silicates.

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