Source to Sink Sedimentation in a Dryland Fluvial System, Western Lake Eyre Basin, Central Australia*
By
Saju Menacherry1, Simon C. Lang1, Tobias H. D. Payenberg1, and William Heins2
Search and Discovery Article #50035 (2006)
Posted August 4, 2006
*Oral presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, April 9-12, 2006
Click to view
presentation in PDF format (4.8 mb).
1University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia ([email protected])
2ExxonMobil Upstream Research, Houston, TX
Abstract
Subsurface
porosity and
permeability
of reservoir sandstones is strongly and systematically
related to
texture
and composition of the initial sediment. Initial sediments
texture
and composition, in turn, are controlled by the provenance lithotype and
transport distance within the sedimentary basin. Therefore the study of a modern
system
from
source to sink in any climatic condition can be used to predict
subsurface compositions and textures of reservoir sandstones. Umbum Creek in
Central Australia is a modern dryland river flows eastward
from
the Davenport
Ranges (Palaeo-Neo Proterozoic metasedimentary rocks) and drains Mesozoic and
Cainozoic sedimentary rocks on its way to the depositional edge on the western
side of Lake Eyre. Sediments were sampled
from
strategically located stream
confluences and categorized through petrography and sieve analysis to capture
the input of the various provenance lithotypes. Results show that over the 100
km transport distance, the observed grain-size as coarse grained and the sorting
is moderate to well. The composition is high in quartz compare to lithics and
feldspar, thus making the sediment a good candidate for reservoir quality sand
in the subsurface. The modern sand is not only directly proportional to the
hinterland bedrock lithology, but also cannibalizes all outcropping bedrock
along the transport path. This practically means that no bypass area exists in
the system, but that the complete catchment constitutes a source for the
sediments, while the sink area is relatively small. This relationship needs to
be considered on predicting subsurface
sandstone
compositions based on a
hinterland study.