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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
West Texas Geological Society
Abstract
Anhydrite
Diagenesis and Reservoir Quality, San Andres Formation, Willard Unit of Wasson Field, Yoakum County, TX
Abstract
Anhydrite
diagenesis greatly influences San Andres reservoir quality at the Willard unit of Wasson field. The largest effect is
anhydrite
cementation. Up to 20% of the reservoir volume is
anhydrite
cement. Most of the cement occludes the large pores, so the effective pore system has significantly smaller pores and throats than would be expected from depositional fabric. Peritidal fenestral fabrics and grainstones are selectively cemented, whereas skeletal wackestones and packstones are partially cemented, but they retain effective pore systems. Late
anhydrite
dissolution, especially around diagenetic
anhydrite
nodules, locally enhances porosity and permeability.
The distribution of
anhydrite
can be explained by the
anhydrite
paragenesis. Some nodular
anhydrite
replaces primary sulfate nodules developed within and below peritidal sequences. Most nodules replace carbonate as a byproduct of regional, Late Guadalupian dolomitization. Pressure dissolution affects
anhydrite
nodules more than dolomite.
Anhydrite
dissolved from the nodules provides the source for burial
anhydrite
cement.
Anhydrite
cement is very coarsely crystalline and poikilotopic. It selectively occludes large pores while many nearby small pores remain uncemented. This fabric is consistent with nucleation-controlled growth controlled by slow supply of dissolved
anhydrite
, low degree of supersaturation, and slow overall crystal growth. Large pores are more likely to have nuclei on their larger surface areas, so they are more likely to be cemented.
Late Cenozoic
anhydrite
dissolution is present in the Willard unit, but it is not as common as it is on the Central Basin Platform. Dissolution enhances permeability, so a feedback between dissolution and flow causes relatively narrow areas of
anhydrite
dissolution surrounded by larger areas with little or no evidence of dissolution.
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