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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Journal of Sedimentary Research (SEPM)

Abstract


Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
Vol. 61 (1991)No. 1. (January), Pages 73-85

Compaction of Wilcox and Carrizo Sandstones (Paleocene-Eocene) to 4420 M, Texas Gulf Coast

E. F.McBride, (2), T. N. Diggs, (2), J. C. Wilson (2)

ABSTRACT

Changes in packing and Previous HitporosityNext Hit resulting from compaction were studied in 40 Wilcox and Carrizo sandstone samples with burial depths from 792 to 4420 m. As measured by packing indices and loss of intergranular Previous HitporosityNext Hit and pre-cement Previous HitporosityNext Hit, sands compacted rapidly to approximately 1200 m and more slowly and variably at greater depths. Contact index (= average number of contacts/grain) and tight packing index (= average number of long, concavo-convex and sutured contacts/grain) increase and intergranular Previous HitporosityNext Hit and pre-cement Previous HitporosityNext Hit decrease logarithmically with burial Previous HitdepthNext Hit. Because of a scarcity of deep samples, compaction behavior deeper than 3000 m is uncertain. Compaction appears to have stopped at 3000 m, which is 500 m shallower than the present Previous HitdepthNext Hit of hard overpressure Neither quartz cement (x = 11%) nor carbonate cement (x = 2%) was introduced shallow enough or insufficient quantity to halt compaction, although quartz cement may have retarded compaction. Compaction was the major cause of Previous HitporosityNext Hit reduction with Previous HitdepthNext Hit (r = 0.79).

The total whole rock Previous HitporosityNext Hit lost by compaction for individual samples ranges from 9 to 31%. At all depths the amount of Previous HitporosityNext Hit lost by grain rearrangement (9 to 27%) is more than twice the amount of Previous HitporosityNext Hit lost by either measureable ductile grain deformation (0 to 8.3%) or pressure solution (0 to 7.3%), although the amount of pressure solution and its influence on grain rearrangement is probably underestimated. Previous HitDepthTop and thermal maturation, the latter represented by time-temperature, best explain compaction in these sandstones.


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