ABSTRACT: Porosity --Effective stress relationships during chemical diagenesis
Swarbrick, Richard E. , University of Durham, Durham, England
Compaction of sediments, i.e. volume loss expressed as porosity, is controlled by both
mechanical and chemical processes. Mechanical compaction of mudrocks can be described well
using porosity--effective stress relationships, developed for the range of lithologies
depending on grain size distribution, if the sediments are at maximum burial and normally
pressured. Where disequilibrium compaction is the origin of any excess pore pressure
(overpressure) these relationships remain valid as sediments remain on the loading curve
for normal compaction. However there are examples
where sediments fall off the loading
curve in the
field
of low effective stress (high overpressure) and low porosity.
Explanations for this
field
of
data
have been in relation to unloading due to uplift or
fluid expansion mechanisms for overpressure. Where unloading has occurred the porosity
recovery is small and the sediments must have had a previously higher effective stress,
normally associated with greater burial stress. However chemical processes, mainly
associated with cementation, can also create low porosity at low effective stress and
represent an alternative explanation. Where diagenesis controls porosity the
porosity--effective stress relationships are no longer valid. Unfortunately the range of
porosity enhancing and reducing processes involved in chemical diagenesis are difficult to
quantify. Case studies are used to illustrate
examples
of young mudrock dominated
sediments which have compacted mechanically, and older sediments in which chemical
processes contribute to their porosity evolution.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90913©2000 AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Bali, Indonesia