--> Abstract: Diagenesis, Deformation, and Fluid Flow in the Monterey Formation of Coastal California, by P. Eichhubl and R. J. Behl; #90935 (1998).
[First Hit]

Datapages, Inc.Print this page

Abstract: Diagenesis, Deformation, and Previous HitFluidNext Hit Previous HitFlowNext Hit in the Monterey Formation of Coastal California

EICHHUBL, PETER, Stanford University, Stanford, CA; andRICHARD J. BEHL, California State University, Long Beach, CA

The Miocene Monterey Formation, a siliceous, organic-rich hemipelagic mudstone sequence deposited across the Neogene California margin, underwent complex sequences of regional and localized diagenetic alteration. Diagenesis accompanied multiple stages of pore Previous HitfluidNext Hit expulsion during burial and differential exhumation of basin flanks. The most significant alteration reactions are dissolution and reprecipitation of biogenic opal-A, metastable opal-CT, and stable quartz, the formation and recrystallization of authigenic dolomite, transformation of smectite to illite, and the diagenesis and catagenesis of organic matter. Alteration is controlled by initial sediment composition, permeability, and porosity, and by development of secondary Previous HitfluidNext Hit Previous HitflowNext Hit pathways. Diagenetic alteration involving silica and carbonate affects not only the matrix permeability but also the brittle response to deformation, thus focusing pore Previous HitfluidNext Hit expulsion along brecciated beds, faults, and fractures. An increase in Previous HitfluidNext Hit focusing with diagenetic maturation is accompanied by an increase in scale of mass transport. Modern formation Previous HitfluidNext Hit, sampled from offshore oil wells, is diagenetically altered connate water. The system locally evolved from 'closed system' or microscale mass transport in mudstone, diatomite, and porcelanite to bedding-scale Previous HitflowNext Hit during chert formation and deformation to large-scale intra- formational Previous HitfluidNext Hit expulsion during hydrocarbon maturation and migration. The latest stages of Previous HitfluidNext Hit expulsion during exhumation of the basin flanks produced massive carbonate cementation along faults and associated fracture systems. These faults channeled Previous HitfluidNext Hit, originating in structural lows and migrating parallel to the formation for several kilometers, across the stratigraphy to higher structural levels and to the surface. Previous HitFluidTop expulsion is apparently driven by porosity collapse which is linked to the dissolution/reprecipitation of loadsupporting silica phases, and to the catagenesis of organic matter.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90935©1998 AAPG Pacific Section Meeting, Ventura, California