Pore
Facies of Smackover Carbonate Reservoirs in Southwest Alabama
KOPASKA-MERKEL, DAVID C., and STEVEN D. MANN, Geological Survey of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL
Pore
facies are rock units that are defined by certain proportions of
pore
types, contain specific
pore
-throat-size distributions, and exhibit certain consequent fluid-flow properties.
Pore
facies may contain only one
pore
type but more typically are characterized by a combination of several
pore
types. Data used in this study consist of point counts of thin sections that are plotted on ternary diagrams whose apices are
pore
types (ternary
pore
plots), commercial porosity and permeability data from core analyses, qualitative thin-section descriptions, and qualitative core descriptions.
Two partially intergrading pore
facies are recognized in the Smackover of southwestern Alabama. These
pore
facies are defined based on the two most common
pore
types in the Smackover-particle-moldic (including secondary intraparticle) and intercrystalline pores-which together account for more than 85% of total porosity in the Smackover. Rocks assigned to the moldic
pore
facies exhibit similar depositional fabrics and experienced similar diagenetic processes. For example, this
pore
facies is most commonly composed of peloid and ooid grainstone (some dolomitized), modified by early cementation and particle dissolution. By contrast, in the intercrystalline
pore
facies, destruction of primary fabrics by nonfabric-selective dolomitization is almost the sole determinant of
pore
-system chara
teristics. The moldic
pore
facies dominates to the northwest (Choctaw, western Clarke, Washington Counties), and the intercrystalline
pore
facies is dominant to the south and east (Mobile, Monroe, Baldwin, Escambia, and Conecuh Counties).
Pore
facies distributions overlap in some areas (e.g., western Monroe County), indicating that multiple
pore
facies occur in many Smackover fields.
The two pore
facies exhibit substantially different petrophysical characteristics. The mean slope of regression lines of porosity on ln (natural log) permeability for the intercrystalline
pore
facies is 0.47, with a range of 0.19 to 0.90. The mean slope for the moldic
pore
facies is 0.22 with a range of 0.18 to 0.27. The higher slopes for the intercrystalline moldic
pore
facies mean that permeability values may be more precisely predicted from porosity data in this
pore
facies. The mean maximum permeability for the intercrystalline
pore
facies is 130 md; the corresponding value is 91 md for the moldic
pore
facies. High-permeability fluid conduits are more common in the intercrystalline
pore
facies than in the moldic
pore
facies. In addition, all high-permeability examples of the moldi
pore
facies
contain substantial amounts of interparticle porosity and are found near the Smackover subcrop. Porosity values are commonly higher in the moldic pore
facies, which has a range of mean porosity of 10.2 to 28.0% compared to 9.6 to 20.5% for the intercrystalline
pore
facies. Greater hydrocarbon volumes can be stored in reservoirs dominated by the moldic
pore
facies, but connectivity is better in the intercrystalline
pore
facies.
Mixtures between the two pore
facies are moderately common. Mixed
pore
systems
commonly resemble the intercrystalline
pore
facies in the slope of the regression line of porosity on ln permeability. In strata with mixed
pore
systems
, isolated particle-moldic pores are commonly connected by networks of intercrystalline pores which control transport of fluids out of particle-moldic pores.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91006 © 1991 GCAGS and GC-SEPM Meeting, Houston, Texas, October 16-18, 1991 (2009)