--> Comparison of Regional Trends of Sandstone and Carbonate Porosity, by T. C. Hester and J. W. Schmoker; #90986 (1994).
[First Hit]

Datapages, Inc.Print this page

Abstract: Comparison of Regional Trends of Sandstone and Carbonate Previous HitPorosityNext Hit

Timothy C. Hester, James W. Schmoker

Predictive Previous HitporosityNext Hit models should account for the effects on Previous HitporosityNext Hit of both burial history and rock properties. Plotting Previous HitporosityNext Hit against thermal maturity accounts for burial history, but because sandstones and carbonates are usually treated separately, relative effects of rock properties on Previous HitporosityNext Hit are largely undocumented. This report uses case examples of Previous HitporosityNext Hit-thermal maturity trends to illustrate an empirical approach to Previous HitporosityNext Hit forecasting that accounts for regional processes underlying Previous HitporosityNext Hit change and allows Previous HitporosityNext Hit variation to be linked with rock properties.

The dependence of Previous HitporosityNext Hit upon thermal maturity is generally lower for carbonates than for sandstones. For example, correlation coefficients for the Jurassic Smackover Formation (carbonate), Alabama, and for the Cretaceous "J" sandstone, Denver basin, Colorado, are -0.40 and -0.88, respectively. The lower correlation for carbonates reflects more Previous HitporosityNext Hit variability and suggests that carbonate Previous HitporosityNext Hit is more affected by local geologic factors than is sandstone Previous HitporosityNext Hit.

The coefficient, a, of the power function ^phgr=a(thermal maturity)b also varies more for carbonates than for sandstones, whereas the exponent, b, is similar for both. This difference suggests that Previous HitporosityNext Hit may vary more between individual groups of carbonate data but that both lithologies are similarly affected by the overriding influence of thermal exposure.

Specific rock properties, such as depositional fabric, grain size, clay content, or the presence of carbonate cement, can affect Previous HitporosityNext Hit locally, but they are secondary effects in a regional sense. Thermal maturity usually accounts for regional Previous HitporosityTop loss in the subsurface better than does any other single factor.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90986©1994 AAPG Annual Convention, Denver, Colorado, June 12-15, 1994