--> Transgressive Reworking and Its Impact on Sandstone Porosity Improvement: The Vivian Formation, Marañón Basin, Northern Perú
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AAPG ACE 2018

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Transgressive Reworking and Its Impact on Sandstone Previous HitPorosityNext Hit Improvement: The Vivian Formation, Marañón Basin, Northern Perú

Abstract

The craton-derived, quartz-rich sandstones of the Upper Cretaceous Vivian Formation are the most important reservoirs in the prolific Marañón foreland basin of northern Perú. Previous HitPorosityNext Hit Previous HitversusNext Hit Previous HitdepthNext Hit analysis for the dominantly fluvial Vivian sandstones shows a simple trend of decreasing Previous HitporosityNext Hit with Previous HitdepthNext Hit, which suggests that overburden stress is the dominant factor that determines Previous HitporosityNext Hit reduction in the basin. However, anomalously high porosities at significant depths showing a substantial diversion from the Previous HitdepthNext Hit Previous HitversusNext Hit Previous HitporosityNext Hit regional trend were identified in few wells. Gamma ray (GR) - based log signatures indicate that those intervals with anomalously high porosities are identified in thin, fining up (dirtying up) successions resting on slightly coarsening up (cleaning up), blocky or funnel-shaped GR electrofacies, dominant on the fluvial Vivian sandstones. The limiting surface that marks the change from fluvial/shallowing-upward strata below to deepening-upward, transgressive strata above is considered a Previous HitmaximumNext Hit regressive surface (MRS). The interval bound between the MRS (coplanar with the initial flooding or transgressive surface, ITS) and the Previous HitmaximumNext Hit flooding surface (MFS) defines the transgressive systems tract (TST).

TST thickness variation along a depositional dip direction can be interpreted as an estimate of transgressive reworking. This process is effective when rates of net deposition and relative sea level change are in equilibrium, allowing extensive reworking of underlying sands. SE-NW- oriented depositional dip cross sections for the Vivian Formation illustrate the transition from a thin proximal sand-rich TST to thicker, more distal sand-poorer TST. Depending on the location along the depositional dip, the MFS may be located very close to or almost coincident with the ITS (=MRS) in proximal parts of the basin and get decoupled significantly basinward leading to a thicker TST. Previous HitPorosityNext Hit values in the early TST sandstones may be significantly higher (up to 8-10%) than the fluvial blocky sands, suggesting transgressive reworking of the underlying sand-rich deposits. This Previous HitporosityTop increase detected in the thin, transgressive sandstones of the Vivian Formation indicates that the decoupling of the ITS and MFS can be used as an estimate of wave reworking during transgressions.