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7th Middle East Geosciences Conference and Exhibition
Manama, Bahrain
March 27-29, 2006
Destruction
in Carbonate Platforms
Statoil, N-4035 Stavanger Norway, phone: 47-51995008, fax: 47-51996660, [email protected]
The important thing to understand about carbonate diagenesis is not necessarily how porosity is created, but how it is
destroyed. Detailed core observations from two deeply-buried carbonate platforms (Finnmark platform, offshore north
Norway, and Khuff Formation, offshore Iran) show that most vertical porosity variation can be accounted for by only two or
three factors, including: (1) stylolite frequency, (2) proportion of argillaceous beds, and (3) anhydrite cement. The spatial
distribution of these factors is determined by the depositional distribution of clay minerals (important for localizing chemical
compaction) and the occurrence of hypersaline depositional conditions and associated brine reflux (important for localizing
anhydrite precipitation). However, the intensity of chemical compaction and consequent porosity loss in adjacent beds by
carbonate cementation also depend upon thermal exposure (temperature as a function of time). To the extent that the
Finnmark and Khuff platforms may be regarded as representative of carbonate reservoirs in general, recognition of the
above porosity-controlling factors can provide the basis for general models
predicting
carbonate reservoir potential at both
reservoir and exploration scale. Distributions of clay and anhydrite should be predictable from stratigraphic architecture,
whereas variations in thermal exposure can be mapped from basin analysis. In the present examples, factors that do not
need to be considered include eogenetic carbonate cementation and dissolution, depositional facies (other than aspects
related to clay and anhydrite content), and mesogenetic leaching to create late secondary porosity.