Inversion of reservoir quality by early diagenesis: an example from the Triassic Buntsandstein, offshore the Netherlands

  • Purvis K
  • Okkerman J
N/ACitations
Citations of this article
12Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Sandstones of the Triassic Main Buntsandstein form a major gas reservoir in the Netherlands offshore. The sequence is dominated by siliciclastics deposited in a semi-arid continental setting, and includes dune, interdune, sheetsand and fluvial sandstones. Reduction in reservoir quality is caused primarily by dolomite, halite and anhydrite cementation, with minor authigenic illite and chlorite. Integration of petrographic and isotopic data has allowed the origins and relative timing of the different cements to be constrained. The carbon and oxygen isotopic composition of dolomite (8 13 C = -3 to +2.9%0 PDB, 8 18 0 = -3.7 to -9.3%0 PDB) combined with strontium isotopic data (0.7091 to 0.7109 86Sr/87Sr) suggests that it precipitated from meteoric groundwater. Halite and anhydrite formed from a mixture of meteoric water and saline fluids expelled from underlying evaporites and claystones. Sulphur isotopic data (8 34 S = +4.2 to + 12.1 %0 CDT) support this interpretation for the origin of the anhydrite. Precipitation of the major authigenic minerals occurred during early diagenesis, prior to burial depths of 500 m. Cementation and groundwater flow preferentially followed the zones of highest permeability and caused an inversion of reservoir qUality. Sandstones with the highest depositional porosity and permeability (i.e. dune sandstones) are the most cemented, and have poorer reservoir quality than the fluvial and interdune sandstones which originally had lower depositional porosity and permeability. Formation of authigenic illite and chlorite occurred during burial and has significantly reduced permeability further.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Purvis, K., & Okkerman, J. A. (1996). Inversion of reservoir quality by early diagenesis: an example from the Triassic Buntsandstein, offshore the Netherlands. In Geology of Gas and Oil under the Netherlands (pp. 179–189). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-0121-6_16

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free