Carbonate diagenesis and porosity:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amsterdam u.a.
Elsevier
1989
|
Schriftenreihe: | Developments in sedimentology
46 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Literaturverz. S. 285 - 315 |
Beschreibung: | XII, 338 S. Ill. |
ISBN: | 0444874151 044487416X 0444412387 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Carbonate diagenesis and porosity |c Clyde H. Moore |
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300 | |a XII, 338 S. |b Ill. | ||
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adam_text | CONTENTS
PREFACE................................................................................................................ V
CHAPTER 1. THE NATURE OF CARBONATE DEPOSITIONAL SYSTEMS-
COMPARISON OF CARBONATES AND SILICICLASTICS.............................. 1
Introduction.............................................................................................................. 1
Consequences of Biological Influences over Carbonate Sediments........................ 1
Introduction................................................................................................... 1
Origin of carbonate sediments....................................................................... 1
The reef, a unique depositional environment................................................ 2
Unique biological control over the texture and fabric of carbonate
sediments....................................................................................................... 3
Carbonate grain composition........................................................................ 5
Sedimentary Processes and Depositional Environments Common to
Both Carbonates and Siliclastics.............................................................................. 6
Carbonate Rock Classification................................................................................. 7
Sedimentation Style-The Ubiquitous Carbonate Shoaling Upward Sequence
andCyclicity............................................................................................................. 9
Carbonate Shelf Evolution-Response to Sea Level................................................. 11
The Changing Nature of Carbonate Shelf Margins in Response to Global
Tectonics.................................................................................................................. 14
Consequences of High Chemical Reactivity of Carbonates Relative
to Siliclastics............................................................................................................ 15
Carbonate precipitation in the marine environment..................................... 15
Susceptibility of shallow marine carbonates to early diagenetic
overprint....................................................................................................... 16
Susceptibility of carbonates to burial diagenesis......................................... 17
Summary.................................................................................................................. 18
CHAPTER 2. THE CLASSIFICATION AND NATURE OF CARBONATE
POROSITY.............................................................................................................. 21
Introduction............................................................................................................. 21
The Classification of Carbonate Porosity................................................................ 21
Introduction.................................................................................................. 21
Fabric selectivity.......................................................................................... 22
CONTENTS
Primary porosity........................................................................................... 24
Secondary porosity....................................................................................... 24
The utilization of the Choquette-Pray porosity classification...................... 26
The Nature of Primary Porosity in Modern Carbonate Sediments.......................... 27
Interparticle porosity.................................................................................... 27
Intraparticle porosity.................................................................................... 28
Depositional porosity of mud-bearing sediments......................................... 29
Framework and fenestral porosity................................................................ 30
Secondary Porosity.................................................................................................. 33
Introduction.................................................................................................. 33
Secondary porosity formation by dissolution............................................... 33
Secondary porosity associated with dolomitization..................................... 35
Secondary porosity associated with breccias............................................... 39
Secondary porosity associated with fractures.............................................. 39
Summary.................................................................................................................. 40
CHAPTER 3. DIAGENETIC ENVIRONMENTS OF POROSITY
MODIFICATION AND TOOLS FOR THEIR RECOGNITION IN THE
GEOLOGIC RECORD............................................................................................ 43
Introduction............................................................................................................. 43
The Diagenetic Environments of Porosity Modification......................................... 43
Introduction.................................................................................................. 43
Marine environment..................................................................................... 44
Meteoric environment.................................................................................. 45
Subsurface environment............................................................................... 45
Tools for the Recognition of Diagenetic Environments of Porosity Modification in the
Geologic Record...................................................................................................... 46
Introduction.................................................................................................. 46
Petrography-cement morphology................................................................. 47
Petrography-cement distributional patterns................................................. 51
Petrography-grain-cement relationships relative to compaction.................. 53
Trace element geochemistry of cements and dolomites............................... 56
Stable isotopes.............................................................................................. 61
Strontium isotopes........................................................................................ 68
Fluid inclusions............................................................................................ 71
Summary.................................................................................................................. 73
CHAPTER 4. NORMAL MARINE DIAGENETIC ENVIRONMENTS.............. 75
Introduction............................................................................................................. 75
Shallow Water Normal Marine Diagenetic Environments...................................... 76
CONTENTS IX
Introduction to the shallow marine cementation process............................. 76
Recognition of ancient shallow marine cements.......................................... 80
Diagenetic setting in the intertidal zone....................................................... 83
Modern shallow water submarine hardgrounds........................................... 87
Recognition and significance of ancient hardgrounds.................................. 88
Diagenetic setting in the modern reef environment..................................... 89
Recognition of reef-related marine diagenesis in the ancient record........... 93
Porosity evolution of reef-related Lower-Middle Cretaceous shelf margins:
the Golden Lane of Mexico and the Stuart City of south Texas.................. 97
Porosity evolution of Middle Devonian reef complexes: Leduc, Rainbow,
Presqu ile , and Swan Hills reefs, Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin 102
Deep Marine Diagenetic Environments................................................................. 108
Introduction to diagenesis in the deep marine environment........................ 108
Diagenesis within the zone of aragonite dissolution................................... 109
Dolomitization below the calcite compensation depth................................ 112
The thermal convection model of marine water dolomitization................ 114
Summary................................................................................................................ 116
CHAPTER 5. EVAPORATIVE MARINE DIAGENETIC ENVIRONMENTS ... 120
Introduction............................................................................................................ 120
Introduction to diagenesis in evaporative marine environments................. 120
The Marginal Marine Sabkha Diagenetic Environment......................................... 123
Modern marginal marine sabkhas............................................................... 123
Diagenetic patterns associated with ancient marginal marine sabkhas....... 127
Ordovician Red River marginal marine sabkha reservoirs, Williston
basin, U.S.A................................................................................................ 130
Mississippian Mission Canyon marginal marine sabkha reservoirs,
Williston basin, U.S.A................................................................................. 134
Ordovician Ellenburger marginal marine sabkha-related dolomite
reservoirs, west Texas, U.S.A...................................................................... 136
Criteria for the recognition of ancient marginal marine sabkha
dolomites..................................................................................................... 141
Marginal Marine Evaporative Lagoons and Basins (Reflux Dolomitization)........ 143
The marginal marine evaporative lagoon as a diagenetic environment...... 143
The MacLeod salt basin.............................................................................. 145
The Upper Permian Guadalupian of west Texas, U.S.A.: an ancient
marginal marine evaporative lagoon complex............................................ 148
Ferry Lake Anhydrite, central Gulf of Mexico basin, U.S.A...................... 150
Upper Jurassic Smackover platform dolomitization, east Texas, U.S.A.:
a reflux dolomitization event....................................................................... 151
X CONTENTS
The Elk Point Basin of Canada................................................................... 155
Michigan Basin, U.S.A............................................................................... 157
Criteria for recognition of ancient reflux dolomites.................................... 158
Summary................................................................................................................. 159
CHAPTER 6. INTRODUCTION TO DIAGENESIS IN THE METEORIC
ENVIRONMENT................................................................................................... 161
Introduction............................................................................................................ 161
Chemical and Mineralogical Considerations.......................................................... 161
Geochemistry of meteoric pore fluids and precipitates............................... 161
Isotopic composition of meteoric waters and carbonates precipitated
from meteoric waters................................................................................... 165
Mineralogie drive of diagenesis within the meteoric environment............. 167
Implications of the kinetics of the CaCO3-H20-CO2 system to grain
stabilization and to porosity evolution in meteoric diagenetic
environments............................................................................................... 168
Hydrologie setting of the meteoric diagenetic environment....................... 172
Summary................................................................................................................. 175
CHAPTER 7. METEORIC DIAGENETIC ENVIRONMENTS........................... 177
Introduction............................................................................................................ 177
The Vadose Diagenetic Environment as Developed in Metastable Carbonate
Sequences.............................................................................................................. 177
Introduction................................................................................................. 177
Upper vadose soil or caliche zone............................................................... 177
Lower vadose zone...................................................................................... 179
Petrography of vadose cements................................................................... 179
Trace element composition of vadose cements........................................... 180
Isotope composition of vadose cements...................................................... 180
Porosity development in the vadose diagenetic environment..................... 181
The Meteoric Phreatic Diagenetic Environment as Developed in Metastable
Carbonate Sequences.............................................................................................. 181
Introduction................................................................................................. 181
Local floating meteoric water lens.............................................................. 182
Petrography of meteoric phreatic cements.................................................. 183
Trace element composition of meteoric phreatic cements from
a local meteoric lens.................................................................................... 184
Stable isotopic composition of meteoric phreatic cements from
a local meteoric lens.................................................................................... 184
Porosity development in a local meteoric lens............................................ 185
CONTENTS XI
Local island model of diagensis.................................................................. 185
The local island model through time........................................................... 186
The Walker Creek field: a Jurassic example of the local island model?..... 187
Regional meteoric aquifer system............................................................... 193
Regional meteoric aquifer diagenetic model............................................... 194
Porosity development and predictability in regional meteoric aquifer
environments............................................................................................... 196
Geochemical trends characteristic of a regional meteoric aquifer system.. 196
The Jurassic Smackover Formation, U.S.Gulf of Mexico: a case history
of economic porosity evolution in a regional meteoric aquifer system...... 199
Mississippian grainstones of southwestern New Mexico, U.S.A.:
a case history of porosity destruction in a regional meteoric
aquifer system............................................................................................. 204
The Meteoric Diagenetic Environment in Mature, Mineralogically Stable
Systems................................................................................................................... 209
Introduction................................................................................................. 209
Karst processes and products...................................................................... 210
Solution, cementation, and porosity evolution in a diagenetically mature
system.......................................................................................................... 211
Karst-related porosity in the Permian San Andres Formation at the
Yates field, west Texas, Central basin platform, U.S.A.............................. 212
Summary................................................................................................................. 216
CHAPTER 8. DOLOMITIZATION ASSOCIATED WITH METEORIC AND MIXED
METEORIC AND MARINE WATERS................................................................. 219
Introduction............................................................................................................ 219
Meteoric-marine mixing, or Dorag model of dolomitization...................... 219
Concerns relative to the validity of the Dorag, or mixing model of
dolomitization, and its application to ancient rock sequences.................... 220
Mississippian North Bridgeport field, Illinois basin, U.S.A.: mixed water
dolomite reservoirs...................................................................................... 225
Dolomitization by continental waters, Coorong Lagoon, south Australia .. 230
Summary................................................................................................................. 234
CHAPTER 9. BURIAL DIAGENETIC ENVIRONMENT................................... 237
Introduction............................................................................................................ 237
The Burial Setting................................................................................................... 237
Introduction................................................................................................. 237
Pressure....................................................................................................... 239
Temperature................................................................................................. 240
XII CONTENTS
Deep burial pore fluids................................................................................ 241
Hydrology of subsurface fluids................................................................... 243
Compaction............................................................................................................. 243
Introduction................................................................................................. 243
Mechanical compaction and dewatering..................................................... 244
Chemical compaction.................................................................................. 247
Factors affecting the efficiency of chemical compaction............................ 251
The North Sea Ekofisk field: a case history of porosity preservation
in chalks....................................................................................................... 254
Burial Cementation................................................................................................. 260
The problem of source of CaCO3 for burial cements.................................. 260
Petrography of burial cements..................................................................... 262
Geochemistry of burial cements.................................................................. 262
Impact of late subsurface cementation on reservoir porosity...................... 266
Subsurface Dissolution........................................................................................... 267
Subsurface Dolomitization..................................................................................... 268
Introduction................................................................................................. 268
Petrography and geochemistry.................................................................... 269
Impact of burial dolomitization on reservoir porosity................................ 270
Upper Devonian dolomitized sequences of Alberta, Canada: a case
history of burial dolomitization................................................................... 271
The Role of Early, Surficial Depositional and Diagenetic Processes Versus
Burial Processes in Shaping Ultimate Porosity Evolution.......................... 277
Predicting Changes in Porosity with Depth............................................................ 279
Summary................................................................................................................. 283
REFERENCES....................................................................................................... 285
INDEX.................................................................................................................... 317
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Moore, Clyde H. |
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spelling | Moore, Clyde H. Verfasser aut Carbonate diagenesis and porosity Clyde H. Moore Amsterdam u.a. Elsevier 1989 XII, 338 S. Ill. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Developments in sedimentology 46 Literaturverz. S. 285 - 315 Petrologia larpcal Rocks, Carbonate Sedimentation and deposition Porosität (DE-588)4175378-1 gnd rswk-swf Diagenese (DE-588)4012038-7 gnd rswk-swf Carbonatgestein (DE-588)4147301-2 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)1071861417 Konferenzschrift gnd-content Diagenese (DE-588)4012038-7 s Carbonatgestein (DE-588)4147301-2 s DE-604 Porosität (DE-588)4175378-1 s Developments in sedimentology 46 (DE-604)BV035610622 46 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=001228328&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Moore, Clyde H. Carbonate diagenesis and porosity Developments in sedimentology Petrologia larpcal Rocks, Carbonate Sedimentation and deposition Porosität (DE-588)4175378-1 gnd Diagenese (DE-588)4012038-7 gnd Carbonatgestein (DE-588)4147301-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4175378-1 (DE-588)4012038-7 (DE-588)4147301-2 (DE-588)1071861417 |
title | Carbonate diagenesis and porosity |
title_auth | Carbonate diagenesis and porosity |
title_exact_search | Carbonate diagenesis and porosity |
title_full | Carbonate diagenesis and porosity Clyde H. Moore |
title_fullStr | Carbonate diagenesis and porosity Clyde H. Moore |
title_full_unstemmed | Carbonate diagenesis and porosity Clyde H. Moore |
title_short | Carbonate diagenesis and porosity |
title_sort | carbonate diagenesis and porosity |
topic | Petrologia larpcal Rocks, Carbonate Sedimentation and deposition Porosität (DE-588)4175378-1 gnd Diagenese (DE-588)4012038-7 gnd Carbonatgestein (DE-588)4147301-2 gnd |
topic_facet | Petrologia Rocks, Carbonate Sedimentation and deposition Porosität Diagenese Carbonatgestein Konferenzschrift |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=001228328&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV035610622 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT mooreclydeh carbonatediagenesisandporosity |