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PSOrigin of Early Overpressure in the Upper Devonian Catskill Delta Complex, Western New York State*
By
Gary G. Lash1 and David R. Blood2
Search and Discovery Article #30049 (2007)
Posted May 23, 2007
*Adapted from poster presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, Long Beach, CA, April 1-4, 2007
1Dept. of Geosciences, SUNY Fredonia, Fredonia, NY 14063, USA ([email protected])
2Chesapeake Appalachia, Charleston, WV 25302 USA
The Upper Devonian Rhinestreet black shale of the western New York state region
of the Appalachian Basin has experienced multiple episodes of overpressure
generation manifested by at least two sets of natural hydraulic fractures. These
overpressure events were thermal in origin and induced by the generation of
hydrocarbons during the Alleghanian orogeny close to or at the Rhinestreet’s
~3.1 km maximum burial depth. Analysis of differential gravitational compaction
strain of the organic-rich shale around embedded
carbonate
concretions that
formed within a meter or so of the seafloor indicates that the Rhinestreet shale
was compacted ~58%. Compaction strain was recalculated to a paleoporosity of
37.8%, a value well in excess of that expected for burial > 3 km. The
paleoporosity of the Rhinestreet shale suggests that
porosity
reduction caused
by normal gravitational compaction of the low-permeability carbonaceous sediment
was arrested at some depth shy of its maximum burial depth by pore pressure in
excess of hydrostatic. The depth at which the Rhinestreet shale became
overpressured, the paleo-fluid retention depth, was estimated by use of
published normal compaction curves and empirical
porosity
-depth algorithms to
fall between 850 and 1,380 m. Early and relatively shallow overpressuring of the
Rhinestreet shale likely originated by disequilibrium compaction induced by a
marked increase in sedimentation rate in the latter half of the Famennian stage
(Late Devonian) as the Catskill Delta Complex prograded westward across the
Appalachian Basin in response to Acadian tectonics. The regional Upper Devonian
stratigraphy of western New York state indicates that the onset of overpressure
occurred at a depth of ~1,100 m, well in advance of the Rhinestreet shale’s
entry into the oil window during the Alleghanian orogeny.
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Burial-induced mechanical
compaction of argillaceous sediment is accomplished by the loss of
f=foe-cz
where z is depth in
meters,
fo
is the initial Under certain conditions, notably when fluid expulsion during burial is restricted due to low permeability and/or rapid sedimentation, mechanical compaction fails to keep pace with increasing vertical effective stress such that the pore pressure is greater than hydrostatic (Swarbrick et al., 2002). This phenomenon, termed disequilibrium compaction.
This paper seeks to
demonstrate that Upper Devonian rocks of the Catskill Delta Complex
of western New York state were overpressured by disequilibrium
compaction relatively early in their burial history. We will use
compaction strain measurements from around early formed
The Upper Devonian succession of western New York State, which includes the Rhinestreet shale, grades upward from a base of marine shales and scattered turbiditesiltstones into shallow marine or brackish-water deposits thus recording progradation of the Catskill Delta across the Acadian foreland basin (Faill, 1985; Ettensohn, 1992). Marine deposits of the Catskill Delta Complex in the northern Appalachian Plateau are arranged in several cycles, each one defined by a basal unit of uniformly laminated fissile black shale that passes upward through a transition zone of alternating black and gray shale beds into strata dominated by poorly bedded (poorly fissile) gray shale and occasional turbidite siltstone and thin black shale beds.
The Rhinestreet shale, the
thickest of the black shale units of the Lake Erie District, western
New York state, comprises at least 54 m of heavily jointed,
dark-gray to black fissile and thinly laminated pyritic shale, thin
gray shale intervals, sparse thin siltstone beds and several
intervals of
The majority of
Concretions offer a unique
opportunity to quantify the effects of gravitational compaction of
the Rhinestreet shale. However, to ensure that our calculations
yield finite compaction strain of the host shale, we must be certain
that the Rhinestreet concretions formed rapidly and, most
importantly, close to the sediment-water interface. Field
observations, including the wrapping of shale around concretions and
the lack of center-to-edge deviation in laminae thickness,
demonstrate that concretions formed rapidly at shallow depth,
perhaps a meter or so below the seafloor (Lash and Blood, 2004a, b).
Lash and Blood (2004a) maintain that Rhinestreet concretions formed
by the passive infilling of host sediment
Scanning electron
microscopic analysis of concretion and host shale samples also
provides evidence for shallow concretionary growth (Lash and Blood,
2004a, b). Specifically, SEM images of mudstone samples collected
from concretion strain shadows reveal a porous fabric of randomly
oriented platy particles, which higher magnification proves to be
face-to-face clay flake stacks or domains. Domains typically are
arranged in a low-density network or cardhouse fabric of
edge-to-edge and edge-to-face contacts marked by large voids
relative to the thickness of clay flakes and domains (Lash and
Blood, 2004b). Secondary electron images of shale samples collected
only 20 to 30 cm from strain shadows, however, show a generally
low-
The most obvious measure of gravitational compaction strain sustained by a volume of sediment following accumulation on the seafloor is the change in layer thickness from the concretion into correlative layers of the encapsulating shale. We measured the thickness of bedding or a bedding interval inside concretions (Ti) (Td in Figure 2-12) (and the thickness of that same interval in the shale (To) (Tc in Figure 2-12), a presumed proxy for the original seafloor thickness of the host sediment. Gravitational compaction strain of the shale outside the strain shadow of the concretion, ε3, is calculated by the following expression,
e3=(Ti-To)/Ti
The mean e3 of the Rhinestreet black shale based on the analysis of 118 concretions and encapsulating shale throughout the unit, expressed as a negative value, is –0.518 or 51.8% (± 4.9%). This value is noteworthy because normally compacted marine shales typically compact more than 65% upon burial to depths comparable to the maximum burial depth of the Rhinestreet shale.
Compaction strain of the
Rhinestreet shale can be used as a measure of the
fp =(fo +100e3)/(e3 +1)
in which fp is expressed as volume percent.
However, in order to
calculate the
fp
of the Rhinestreet shale, we first must obtain a reasonable value
for the
Strain analysis of
overburden-induced differential mechanical compaction of shale
around early (and shallow) formed
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