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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
from:
General Geology of the Ferron Sandstone
Chapter 9:
Petrophysics of the Cretaceous Ferron Sandstone, Central Utah
Richard D. Jarrard1, Carl H. Sondergeld2,
Marjorie A. Chan1, and Stephanie N. Erickson3
1Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Utah, Salt Lake
City, Utah
2Mewbourne School of Petroleum and Geological Engineering, University of
Oklahoma, Tulsa, Oklahoma
3ConocoPhillips Alaska, Inc., Anchorage, Alaska
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ABSTRACT
velocity
, porosity, and permeability
developed in the subsurface. Burial to depths of 3000-3400 m (9800-11,100 ft), with
associated compaction and carbonate cementation, was followed by uplift, which exhumed
different portions of the Ferron Sandstone by 0 to >3400 m. Acomplex diagenetic history
culminated with the development of secondary intergranular porosity by carbonate
dissolution during exhumation, because of increasing groundwater flux at depths shallower
than ~2 km (7000 ft) subsurface.
Velocity
logs show
velocity
decreases larger than
expected from porosity increase; we attribute the excess to presence of microcracks.
Outcrop plugs exhibit even higher porosity and lower
velocity
than shallow logs, probably
because of enhanced leaching of carbonate cement. Ferron coreplug and log
velocity
responses to this secondary porosity are comparable to that of primary intergranular
porosity, but these samples lack permeability anisotropy and sensitivity of
velocity
and
permeability to clay content, both of which are typical of primary porosity. Ferron
Sandstone permeability is very closely related to porosity, and therefore exhumation
increases permeability by porosity enhancement. The influence of grain size on porosity
and permeability persists after both initial compaction/cementation, and subsequent
exhumation and secondary porosity development. Consequently, Ferron outcrop stratigraphy
can provide useful clues to fluid-flow patterns in other deltaic formations, despite its
complex diagenetic history.
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