DIAGENETIC EFFECT ON RESERVOIR QUALITY OF SILICICLASTIC AND VOLCANICLASTIC SANDSTONES FROM A PALEOGENE VOLCANIC RIFTED MARGIN, EAST GREENLAND

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Siliciclastic and volcaniclastic sediments in a volcanic rifted-margin succession may experience a complex diagenetic history during burial that can have a large impact on sandstone reservoir properties. To understand such changes, variations in initial sediment composition and succeeding diagenetic changes have been studied for a Paleogene outcrop analogue in the Kangerlussuaq area, East Greenland. The nature of the mafic volcanics-bearing succession, which consists of intra-volcanic sandstones, accommodated over quartz-rich pre-volcanic fluvial sandstones, are comparable to the settings of recently discovered hydrocarbon-producing sandstones in the Faroe–Shetland Basin on the conjugate Atlantic margin. Our petrographic and provenance investigations of the pre- and intra-volcanic sandstones are supported by geochemical and X-ray diffraction analyses. The intra-volcanic sandstones were deposited in shallow marine environments with mixed siliciclastic and volcaniclastic input, the latter rich in felsic to mafic volcanic rock fragments and feldspar grains. Similar zircon age distributions of pre- and intra-volcanic sandstones support a continued supply from the same siliciclastic sediment source after the onset of volcanism. Variations in initial detrital grain and pore-fluid (fresh to marine) compositions resulted in different diagenetic changes in the pre- and intra-volcanic sandstones. However, where siliciclastic sandstones were overlain by volcaniclastic rocks rather than massive lava flows, the diagenetic changes resemble those of the intra-volcanic sandstones. The cementing phases are typically quartz, illite (probably illitized kaolinite), and rare anatase in the pre-volcanic sandstones. Chlorite, calcite, zeolite/ feldspar, opal/quartz, and titanite are characteristic authigenic phases in the intra-volcanic sandstones. Precipitation of different minerals in the pre- and intra-volcanic sandstones show that the detrital composition (and to a lesser extent depositional environment) played a major role during early and late diagenesis after deep burial (up to 6–8 km). Inter-eruptive siliciclastic units may prove to form highly valuable reservoirs when they are composed of mixed siliciclastic and volcaniclastic material. In the stratigraphically youngest intra-volcanic sandstones and pre-volcanic sandstones overlain by hyaloclastite or tuff, there is a high potential for preservation of interparticle porosity during burial (, 5 km) due to early chlorite rims and the generation of secondary porosity after the dissolution of early zeolite cement.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftJournal of Sedimentary Research
Vol/bind93
Udgave nummer12
Sider (fra-til)895-931
ISSN1527-1404
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2023

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
Chevron North Sea Ltd and the Sindri Group (Project C46-43-01) are thanked for their financial support. This paper is published with permission from the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland. Thanks to Platina, Prolog, and the drilling company, besides several colleagues for good companionship during the field campaign in Sødalen 2008. Thanks are addressed to Dirk Frei, GEUS, for providing zircon-age dating and heavy-mineral analyses of the sediments. Jørgen Kystol, GEUS, is thanked for geochemical analyses of several samples. Thanks to Troels Nielsen, GEUS, for supplying geochemical data on the basalt lava flows from the Vandfaldsdalen and Mikis formations from the Kangerlussuaq area and for discussion about volcanism. Thanks to Asger Ken Pedersen, Natural History Museum, and Lotte Melchior Larsen, GEUS, for numerous discussions about the volcanic rock fragments. Thanks to Jette Halskov and Jacob Lindt Bendtsen, GEUS, for preparing the drawings. Thanks to Cathrine Jex, GEUS, for correcting the English. The authors are indebted to Editor Kathleen M. Marsaglia, Associate Editor Marsha French, Professor Reinhard Gaupp, Professor Salvatore, Simon Passey, and Andrew Morton for their constructive comments, which improved the manuscript substantially.

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2023, SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology).

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