--> Abstract: Controls on Velocity and Formation Factor in High-Porosity Siliciclastic Sediments, by S. N. Erickson and R. D. Jarrard; #90928 (1999).
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ERICKSON, STEPHANIE N., and RICHARD D. JARRARD
University of Utah

Abstract: Controls on Velocity and Formation Factor in High-Previous HitPorosityNext Hit Siliciclastic Sediments

For high-Previous HitporosityNext Hit siliciclastic sediments, we find that the controls on velocity and formation factor are surprisingly different from what has been previously assumed based on low-Previous HitporosityNext Hit sediments. It is well known that velocity depends on both lithology and Previous HitporosityNext Hit at low porosities. However, well log data from Ocean Drilling Program Leg 156 to the Amazon Submarine Fan show that velocities of these high Previous HitporosityNext Hit (30-60%) sediments fit a single velocity/Previous HitporosityNext Hit relationship, regardless of lithology. The only lithology effect on velocity is indirect, associated with the different porosities of sandy and muddy sediments.

At low Previous HitporosityNext Hit, it is well known that resistivity and formation factor depend on both Previous HitporosityNext Hit and clay content. Archie's law is typically regarded as appropriate for clean sandstones because the conductivity of the formation is due to the connectivity of the pores, and shale conductivity is higher than sandstone conductivity because clay surface conduction dominates pore conductivity in low-Previous HitporosityNext Hit shales. However, Previous HitporosityNext Hit vs. formation-factor crossplots for Amazon Fan demonstrate that high-Previous HitporosityNext Hit shaley sediments are actually less conductive than sands: at a given Previous HitporosityNext Hit, sediments with more than 40% shale exhibit much higher formation factors than do sediments with less shale. We conclude that pore tortuosity is more important than clay conduction as a control of formation factor in high-Previous HitporosityNext Hit clay-rich sediments.

These revised formation-factor and velocity relationships are potentially useful for log-based determinations of Previous HitporosityNext Hit and water saturation in high-Previous HitporosityNext Hit sediments. In addition, they suggest that the combination of two surface geophysical techniques - multichannel seismic and electrical - can provide a unique determination of both Previous HitporosityNext Hit and sand/shale content for high-Previous HitporosityTop siliciclastic sediments.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90928©1999 AAPG Annual Convention, San Antonio, Texas