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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
2011. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.
DOI:10.1306/02221110094
Overpressure
and mudrock compaction in the Lower Kutai Basin, Indonesia: A radical reappraisal


Agus M. Ramdhan,1 Neil R. Goulty2
1Department of Earth Sciences, Durham University, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, United Kingdom; present address: Department of Geology, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Jl. Ganesha 10, Bandung 40132, Indonesia; agusmr1974@yahoo.com
2Department of Earth Sciences, Durham University, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, United Kingdom; n.r.goulty@durham.ac.uk
ABSTRACT
Lateral drainage and high temperatures in the shelfal area of the Lower Kutai Basin provide an exceptional opportunity to study compaction of Miocene mudrocks and overpressure
generation. Previous workers agreed that the principal mechanism of
overpressure
generation is disequilibrium compaction, but sonic and resistivity logs in several fields display reversals at a transition zone into high
overpressure
, indicating that
overpressure
is generated by unloading processes. The transition zone coincides with the vitrinite reflectance threshold for gas generation. Extreme overpressures in some wells are associated with reversals on density logs too, interpreted to result from opening cracks.
The density-depth trends through the mudrocks are similar in all wells and independent of overpressure
until extreme overpressures are encountered. This observation strongly suggests that porosity reduction is controlled by chemical compaction and that cementation has caused the mudrocks to become overcompacted, relative to the prevailing effective stress, at burial depths of approximately 3 km (1.9 mi) where the top of
overpressure
is encountered. Hence, the Lower Kutai Basin contains a unique reported example, to date, of a Neogene succession in which high overpressures are generated by unloading processes with no contribution from disequilibrium compaction.
Density logs from the Peciko field have been used to derive the empirical porosity-depth trend = 0.434e
0.164z for mudrocks in the depth range 6000 to 15,000 ft (1800 to 4600 m), where z is depth in thousands of feet. The corresponding temperature range is 85 to 170
C, so this compaction curve applies for mudrocks in the chemical compaction regime, where no discrete smectite is present.
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