4.7 Article

Diagenesis and reservoir quality evolution of palaeocene deep-water, marine sandstones, the Shetland-Faroes Basin, British continental shelf

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 6, Pages 514-543

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2007.07.012

Keywords

diagenesis; turbidites; reservoir quality; tertiary; Shetland-Faroes Basin; sequence stratigraphy

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The Palaeocene, deep-water marine sandstones recovered from six wells in the Shetland-Faroes Basin represent lowstand, transgressive and highstand systems tract turbiditic sediments. Mineralogic, petrographic, and geochemical analyses of these siliciclastics are used to decipher and discuss the diagenetic alterations and subsequent reservoir quality evolution. The Middle-Upper Palaeocene sandstones (subarkoses to arkoses) from the Shetland-Faroes Basin, British continental shelf are submarine turbiditic deposits that are cemented predominantly by carbonates, quartz and clay minerals. Carbonate cements (intergranular and grain replacive calcite, siderite, ferroan dolomite and ankerite) are of eogenetic and mesogenetic origins. The eogenetic alterations have been mediated by marine, meteoric and mixed marine/meteoric porewaters and resulted mainly in the precipitation of calcite (delta O-18(V-PDB) = -10.9 parts per thousand and -3.8 parts per thousand), trace amounts of non-ferroan dolomite, siderite (delta O-18(V-PDB) = -14.4 parts per thousand to -06 parts per thousand), as well as smectite and kaolinite in the lowstand systems tract (LST) and highstand systems tract (HST) turbiditic sandstone below the sequence boundary. Minor eogenetic siderite has precipitated between expanded and kaolinitized micas, primarily biotite. The mesogenetic alterations are interpreted to have been mediated by evolved marine porewaters and resulted in the precipitation of calcite (delta O-18(V-PDB) = -12.9 parts per thousand to -7.8 parts per thousand) and Fe-dolomite/ankerite (delta O-18(V-PDB) = - 12.1 parts per thousand to -6.3 parts per thousand) at temperatures of 50-140 and 60-140 degrees C, respectively. Quartz overgrowths and outgrowth, which post- and pre-date the mesogenetic carbonate cements is more common in the LST and TST of distal turbiditic sandstone. Discrete quartz cement, which is closely associated with illite and chlorite, is the final diagenetic phase. The clay minerals include intergranular and grain replacive eogenetic kaolinite, smectite and mesogenetic illite and chlorite. Kaolinite has been subjected to mesogenetic replacement by dickite. The K-feldspar and plagioclase grains have been albitized. Dissolution of calcite cement and of framework grain (feldspar, volcanic fragments and mud intraclasts) has resulted in a considerable enhancement of reservoir quality. (C) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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