Compaction Trends and Implications for Uplift, National Petroleum Reserve, Alaska
By
P.H. Nelson and K.J. Bird (U.S. Geological Survey)
Porosity
decreases with depth in sedimentary basins
due to the effects of compaction and diagenesis. The
porosity
profile in an
individual well depends upon the maximum effective stress, which is usually
determined by the maximum depth of burial. Consequently, present-day
porosity
profiles can be interpreted in terms of maximum burial and subsequent uplift. In
1992, Issler examined uplift and overpressure in the Mackenzie Delta of
northwestern Canada, computing
porosity
in mudstones from sonic logs. Issler’s
approach is extended here to include sandstones as well as mudstones, and is
applied in wells within and adjacent to the National Petroleum Reserve, Alaska.
Evaluating the mudstone-rich Early Cretaceous Torok
Formation, we find that the
porosity
-depth dependence can be fit with one or two
straight lines in each well. The slopes of these lines from wells in the coastal
plain are similar to those determined by Issler for Mackenzie Delta wells.
However, the
porosity
-depth lines are offset among wells from different areas
within the coastal plain, reflecting differences in uplift along the Barrow
Arch. Slopes from wells in the foothills are steeper than in the coastal plain
(
porosity
decreases less rapidly with depth in the foothills); these steeper
slopes are the consequence of deep burial and subsequent uplift. When the line
segments are replotted in terms of
porosity
against maximum burial temperature
(derived from vitrinite reflectance) instead of present-day depth, the trends
from different areas within the coastal plain coalesce, while the trends from
wells in the foothills retain the steeper slopes characteristic of deep burial.
Thus, maximum burial temperature explains some but not all of the differences in
the
porosity
profiles.
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.