Diagenesis and Porosity Development in Oriskany Sandstone
of West Virginia
K. R. Bruner, M. T. Heald
Petrographic investigation of 12 Oriskany cores from West Virginia
and
surrounding states shows a complex relationship between diagenesis and porosity
development. Deposited as a fossiliferous marine sandstone, the Oriskany is
cemented by calcium carbonate and/or quartz, depending on the predominant
clastic material (fossils or quartz). Porosity ranges from less than 2% to
approximately 8%, and pore types vary across the state. Primary-intergranular
and fracture are the major porosity types observed in all cores. Primary
porosity is best developed in central and western areas where cementation is
incomplete. Petroleumlike materials (paraffin in nature) commonly occur as pore
linings or inclusions in secondary quartz. To the east, fracture porosity
dominates in tightly cem nted sandstones, but vertical and horizontal fractures
are observed in all cores. Many fractures, however, have been healed with quartz
and calcite. Minor amounts of carbonate leaching supplements primary porosity.
In Marion County, partial replacement of carbonate fossils by fringing
microcrystalline quartz, along with recrystallization and subsequent leaching of
the carbonate, has produced distinctive secondary pores. Porosity increases
dramatically in western areas of the state. In addition to primary and secondary
porosity, microcrystalline porosity within chert and phosphatic zones is
present. Other minor and relatively insignificant porosity types in the Oriskany
from all regions include intraskeletal, intragranular quartz and feldspar, and
intercrystalline dolomite. Although overa l porosity is low, intergranular
porosity and fracture porosity are best developed in quartz-rich zones.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91031©1988 AAPG Eastern Section, Charleston, West Virginia
, 13-16 September 1988.