Origin and distribution of grain-coating and pore-filling chlorite in deltaic sandstones for reservoir quality assessment

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

Joshua Griffiths (BP Renewal, University of Liverpool)

Richard H. Worden (University of Liverpool)

James E.P. Utley (University of Liverpool)

Christian Brostrøm (Equinor ASA)

Allard Martinius (Equinor ASA, TU Delft - Applied Geology)

Auwalu Y. Lawan (Bayero University, University of Liverpool)

Ali I. Al-Hajri (University of Liverpool)

Research Group
Applied Geology
Copyright
© 2021 Joshua Griffiths, Richard H. Worden, James E.P. Utley, Christian Brostrøm, A.W. Martinius, Auwalu Y. Lawan, Ali I. Al-Hajri
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2021.105326
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 Joshua Griffiths, Richard H. Worden, James E.P. Utley, Christian Brostrøm, A.W. Martinius, Auwalu Y. Lawan, Ali I. Al-Hajri
Research Group
Applied Geology
Bibliographical Note
Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository ‘You share, we take care!’ – Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.@en
Volume number
134
Pages (from-to)
1-23
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Abstract

Grain-coating chlorite preserves porosity and permeability through the inhibition of quartz cement whereas pore-filling chlorite blocks pore-throats and diminishes reservoir quality. The aim of this study is to determine the origin and principal mechanisms which govern the distribution of grain-coating and pore-filling chlorite in Jurassic deltaic sandstones (Tilje Formation, Smørbukk field, Mid Norwegian Shelf). The study focussed on very high-density sampling for petrographic analysis, from three sections of sandstone core from the same well with contrasting reservoir quality, rather than the low-density sampling approach typically employed. The aim was to gain new understanding of specific controls on porosity and permeability based on core description, core analysis measurements and a suite of petrographic techniques. Results of this study show grain-coating chlorite originated from the thermally-driven recrystallisation of detrital clay coats and/or clay mineral precursors. Pore-filling chlorite has principally derived from the ductile deformation of chlorite-rich Fe-ooids, that were possibly reworked from a proximal evaporitic setting. The distribution of chlorite precursor material, detrital clay coats, and subsequently the distribution of grain-coating and pore-filling chlorite, were controlled by the relative dominance of tidal and fluvial processes active during sediment deposition. Optimum grain-coating chlorite is found in tidal-fluvial sandstones with moderate fluvial influence. Pore-filling chlorite is pervasive in tidal-fluvial channel sandstones deposited during periods of high fluvial discharge, or proximal to the central turbidity maximum zone; marked by an abundance of fluid mud. Tidal channel sandstones with no fluvial influence are pervasively quartz cemented due to an absence of grain-coating chlorite. Grain-coating chlorite and good reservoir quality occurs in heterolithic distributary mouth bar sandstones, however mixing of mud- and sand-prone facies due to intense bioturbation has reduced permeability. Results from this study can be used to predict reservoir quality in the Smørbukk field and in analogous shallow-marine sandstones worldwide.

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