Studies of Interbedded Shales in Tango Fluvial Sandstones, Ivishak Sandstone, Prudhoe Bay: Implications for Depositional Setting and Reservoir Architecture
By
J.J. Hickey (Applied Reservoir Petrology) and B.A. Burns (Phillips Alaska, Inc.)
New
interpretations of significant marine influence in the Tango interval of the
Ivishak reservoir at Prudhoe Bay carry important implications for shale geometry
and continuity, vertical compartmentalization, and dynamic fluid
distribution
. A
broad study of shale characteristics within the Tango and other members of the
Ivishak was undertaken in order to investigate the possible presence of regional
flooding surfaces. Thin-section petrography, X-ray diffraction, and whole-rock
geochemistry techniques were employed to document features diagnostic of
syndepositional conditions, such as patterns of clay mineral
distribution
(reflecting preferential flocculation in a proximal marine setting), presence of
oxidation and other pedogenic processes, early diagenetic minerals (especially
siderite and pyrite), and patterns of trace metal
distribution
(also a
reflection of salinity-induced changes in clay adsorption properties). These
features occur in varying combinations and degrees of development in the samples
examined, and permit the definition of a series of gradational categories (petrofacies)
ranging from fully non-marine to mixed/transitional through fully marine. The
stratigraphic
and
geographic
distribution
of the various shale petrofacies,
integrated with other lines of evidence such as core descriptions and sand maps,
indicate the location and nature of marine incursions during the Tango interval.
Thicker shale beds typically record a sequence of changing environmental
conditions, from initial marine to eventual nonmarine deposition. On balance
these shale studies confirm the idea of multiple episodes of marine influence
punctuating Tango fluvial sand deposition, but usually suggest small-scale,
localized events such as ephemeral bays and lakes rather than regional
transgressions.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90008©2002 AAPG Pacific Section/SPE Western Region Joint Conference of Geoscientists and Petroleum Engineers, Anchorage, Alaska, May 18–23, 2002.