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Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution of pore space in the Poza Rica trend (Mid‐Cretaceous), Mexico

Paul Enos
- 01 Apr 1988 - 
- Vol. 35, Iss: 2, pp 287-325
TLDR
In this article, a diagenetic history of porosity at various stages from original sediment to reservoir rock has been studied in the Poza Rica trend of the Tampico embayment, Mexico, which will ultimately produce 2.3 × 109 barrels of oil from mid-Cretaceous basin-margin deposits.
Abstract
The Poza Rica trend of the Tampico embayment, Mexico, will ultimately produce more than 2.3 × 109 barrels of oil from Mid-Cretaceous (Albian-Cenomanian) basin-margin deposits. Bioclastic grainstone, packstone, and wackestone are interbedded with polymictic lime breccia and dolomitized debris; all were deposited by sediment gravity flow. Indigenous sediment was pelagic lime mud. Typical reservoir porosities are about 10%; permeabilities average 2 md and rarely exceed 100 md. Porosity is largely the result of selective dissolution of rudist fragments, which were originally aragonite. Detailed petrographic study, with emphasis on the diagenetic products, allows quantitative assessment of porosity at various diagenetic stages from original sediment to reservoir rock. A relatively simple diagenetic history is reflected by about 90% of the samples studied: primary porosity was reduced through lithification of matrix mud and initial cementation by clear, equant to bladed, non-ferroan calcite. Later dissolution produced extensive skelmoldic and minor vuggy porosity. Subsequently, non-ferroan calcite cement reduced porosity before the emplacement of hydrocarbons. Reconstructed sediment porosities are comparable to, but lower than, modern counterparts. The initial phase of cementation and presumed lithification of mud greatly reduced porosity in all lithologies, but appreciably more porosity persisted in grainstone and packstone than in wackestone or mudstone. Dissolution produced a porosity resurrection, which exceeded that of the initial sediment in some grainstones. Calcite cementation and local multiphase quartz cementation and dolomitization reduced porosity to present average values of 8–12% in grain-supported rocks and 3% in mud-supported rocks. The greater persistence of primary porosity and, therefore, permeability in grain-supported rocks probably accounts for their greater secondary porosity development and ultimate reservoir quality. Geometrically averaged permeabilities range from only 0.17 md in wackestone to 3.85 md in dolomite, but differ significantly with rock type and grain size. Permeability increases with porosity in all lithologies; the rate of increase is greater at higher porosities and with coarser grain sizes. The agent for both early cementation and development of secondary porosity appears to have been meteoric water. Subaerial exposure appears to be ruled out, however, by a basin-margin depositional environment and continued burial beneath Upper Cretaceous pelagic sediments. Early exposure to meteoric water can be explained by a hydrologic head developed during penecontemporaenous exposure that produced cavernous porosity in the adjacent Golden Lane trend. Descending meteoric water likely emerged as submarine springs along the Tamabra trend. Deposition of pelagic limestone during the Turonian blanketed part of the Golden Lane escarpment to enhance development of a large freshwater lens; gaps in the blanket localized springs and influenced flow patterns within the Poza Rica field. Analogous freshwater circulation exists today in northern Florida.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Questioning carbonate diagenetic paradigms: evidence from the Neogene of the Bahamas

TL;DR: The Bahamas transect as mentioned in this paper consists of seven cores drilled in the prograding western margin of Great Bahama Bank and two proximal cores (Clino and Unda) were drilled on the platform top and recovered shallow-water platform to reef facies overlying deeper margin and proximal slope facies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of Cretaceous sea level rise and anoxic events on the Mesozoic carbonate platform of Yugoslavia

Hugh C. Jenkyns
- 01 Jun 1991 - 
TL;DR: The Adriatic/Dinaric carbonate platform of Yugoslavia was influenced by rapid sea level rise and an oceanic anoxic event during the Cenomanian-Turonian transgression as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Origin of atoll lagoons

TL;DR: In this article, a database of 301 atolls from the Pacific, Indian, and Atlantic Oceans has been analyzed with respect to factors governing maximum atoll lagoon depth, and the contribution of reefs to atoll rim construction appears to be limited generally to ∼10 m, leaving more than 20 m of relief to be explained at most atolls.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diagenesis of Barremian-Aptian platform carbonates (the Urgonian Limestone Formation of SE France): near-surface and shallow-burial diagenesis

TL;DR: The diagenesis of carbonate platform sediments is controlled by the original facies and mineralogy, climate, sea-level changes and burial history; these controls are clearly seen in the diagenisation of the Urgonian platform carbonates of SE France as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interactions between the Laramide Foreland and the passive margin of the Gulf of Mexico: Tectonics and sedimentation in the Golden Lane area, Veracruz State, Mexico

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the analyses of the clastic sedimentary infill of the Coastal Plain of Eastern Mexico, which initiated synchronously with the Laramide orogeny in the vicinity of the Golden Lane.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Modified Staining Technique for Carbonates in Thin Section

TL;DR: Alizarin red S in solution is probably the best method of distinguishing between the common carbonates as mentioned in this paper, and it is now known that any carbonate mineral containing small quantities of ferrous iron will stain with potassium ferricyanide providing the carbonate can be made to react with an acid medium.
Journal ArticleDOI

Petrophysical Parameters Estimated From Visual Descriptions of Carbonate Rocks: A Field Classification of Carbonate Pore Space

TL;DR: In this paper, a classification of carbonate porosity is proposed based on the data presented, which is intended to be used in the field or for routine laboratory description. But no acceptable method has been developed to estimate visually the permeability of touching vugs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Boring algae, micrite envelopes and lithification of molluscan biosparites

TL;DR: The preservation of molluscan shells as calcite casts is commonly a result of their centripetal replacement, while on the sea floor, by a stable micrite envelope, which grows in three stages: (1) algae bore into the shell wall, (2) the algal filaments die and decay, (3) micritic aragonite fills the tubes as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Low-magnesian calcite limestones forming at the deep-sea floor, Tongue of the Ocean, Bahamas

TL;DR: In this paper, the path of sea-floor diagenesis of peri-platform carbonate ooze was found to be the same as that of freshwater diagenisation.
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