Abstract
Burial diagenesis and reservoir quality modification in North Sea Jurassic reservoirs are shown to be largely controlled by the pre-burial composition of the sandstones. Mechanical compaction at shallow burial, chemical compaction and quartz cementation at deep burial, and clay mineral authigenesis are the three most important reservoir quality modifying diagenetic processes, and all these can largely be considered as being isochemical or partially isochemical. It follows that reservoir quality prediction will be successful if the initial mineralogy and texture of the reservoir rocks, the quantitative effects of changing rock composition, and the burial history are known. Although a highly accurate prediction of initial sandstone composition is rarely achievable, an understanding of the effect of varying mineralogy on the most important reservoir quality modifying processes will in most cases provide the necessary basis for adequate reservoir quality prediction. The initial composition of the sandstones is controlled by the sedinmentological environment, depositional processes, climate and the type of material transported into the sedimentary basin. Hence, integrated sedimentological and petrological studies, addressing the links between three-dimensional distributions of depositional facies, initial sandstone composition and reservoir quality models are the key to successful reservoir quality prediction prior to drilling in frontier areas as wellmore » as detailed reservoir characterization during field development.« less
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