Abstract

The provenance of detrital quartz is a useful predictor in frontier basin sandstone reservoirs of the availability of coarse-grained quartz grains of plutonic or high grade metamorphic origin. The standard approach is to use scanning electron microscope (SEM) panchromatic cathodoluminescence (CL) imagery and observations from an optical petrographic microscope. We describe a work flow, modified from previous literature proposals, to determine quartz provenance in detrital grains using optical petrographic microscopy and CL properties from both a hot-cathode cathodoluminescence microscope attachment (HCMA) and panchromatic SEM-CL. HCMA analysis permits better discrimination of different types of metamorphic quartz. This method is applied to a Middle Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous section in the Bandol-1 wildcat well, located in the Laurentian sub-basin south of Newfoundland. Two types of high-grade metamorphic quartz are distinguished, one with low luminescence as described in previous literature and one with medium blue CL colour and a moderate colour shift that is also known from granulite in the hinterland. Three phases of detrital supply are identified, suggesting progressive unroofing of higher grade metamorphic sources through the middle Jurassic and major input of plutonic quartz in the early Cretaceous.

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