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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

CSPG Special Publications

Abstract


Facts and Principles of World Petroleum Occurrence — Memoir 6, 1980
Pages 998-999
Symposium Abstracts

Modern Concepts in Previous HitSandstoneNext Hit Diagenesis: Abstract

Volkmar Schmidt1, David A. McDonald2

Established concepts in Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit diagenesis are changing and new concepts are being developed as the result of new or improved methods of analysis and interpretation. Advanced methods are now routinely used in the visual analysis of sandstones and pore casts, and in the analysis of the crystallography and chemical or isotopic composition of Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit constituents. Interpretive methods that originally were developed in the study of carbonate diagenesis proved to be extremely useful in the petrologic interpretation of sandstones. Changes of composition, fabric, porosity and pore geometry can commonly be assigned to the three major realms of Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit diagenesis:

  1. eodiagenesis (pre-burial);

  2. mesodiagenesis (during burial); and

  3. telodiagenesis (post-burial).

Significant improvements have also been achieved in the ability to differentiate between primary and secondary Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit porosity, and in tracing the thermal history and the history of fluid migration and compaction in sandstones and their host sediments.

Mesodiagenesis is the most important realm for Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit diagenesis in relation to the exploration and production of conventional hydrocarbons. Mesodiagenesis is not simply an irreversible path of mineral stabilization and porosity loss dependent mainly on the factors of time, temperature, overburden pressure, and the mineralogical maturity of Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit constituents. The course of mesogenetic Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit alteration is often strongly influenced by additional factors such as:

  1. geopressures;

  2. carbonate content;

  3. the abundance, type, and degree of maturation of associated organic matter;

  4. chemical composition of pore fluids;

  5. flow rate and migration path of pore fluids;

  6. transfer of dissolved matter between sandstones and intercalated host sediments;

  7. Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit fabric;

  8. pore volume and pore geometry; and

  9. presence of hydrocarbons as pore filling media.

Large volumes of mesogenetic porosity are frequently created in Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit at depth. This significantly increases the depth range of reservoir-grade porosity in sandstones. Dissolution of carbonate constituents is prominent among the mesogenetic Previous HitprocessesNext Hit that create Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit porosity. The chief cause for this decarbonatization appears to be the carbon dioxide that is generated during the maturation of organic matter.

Mesogenetic loss of Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit porosity occurs mainly through:

  1. mechanical compaction;

  2. chemical compaction; and

  3. authigenic cementation mainly by silica, carbonate, clay minerals and zeolites.

Zones of Previous HitdiageneticNext Hit textural maturity of sandstones can be defined on the basis of porosity loss and are mappable in the subsurface.

Chemical compaction is commonly but not invariably associated with reprecipitation of the dissolved constituents. In most sandstones the amount of mesogenetic pore-cement exceeds the amount of constituents that were dissolved during chemical compaction. This indicates a net addition of mineral matter in sandstones.

Minerals that are unstable under prevailing physicochemical conditions may be eliminated by dissolution, replacement or crystallographic reorganization. All common Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit constituents, including quartz, can become unstable during mesodiagenesis and may be replaced by another mineral, or be dissolved.

Physico-chemical conditions in the subsurface vary greatly through time in individual Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit units. This is reflected in the complex and variable history of mesogenetic Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit diagenesis. The reservoir quality of sandstones can only be predicted if the status of Previous HitdiageneticNext Hit alteration itself can be foretold. Accurate prediction of the effects of mesodiagenesis in sandstones is still virtually impossible. However, the success ratio of qualitative predictions of the Previous HitdiageneticNext Hit status of Previous HitsandstoneTop reservoirs has been significantly increased through the application of modern petrologic concepts.

Acknowledgments and Associated Footnotes

1 Petro-Canada, Calgary, Alberta

2 Petro-Canada, Calgary, Alberta

Copyright © 2009 by the Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists