Abstract

When a reservoir fills with petroleum, the process commonly takes about 10 Ma. Cementation of a sandstone reservoir can occur in a similarly short time. There is much direct evidence that these two processes can occur at about the same time. In petroleum-bearing sandstone reservoirs it is common to find inclusions of petroleum trapped in diagenetic minerals. The effect on reservoir porosity and permeability caused by the interaction of these two processes is dramatic. Fields with a relatively early petroleum charge, earlier that is than cementation, can be saved from the ravages of reservoir quality destruction. Fields in which the two processes were acting at the same time commonly display porosity-depth gradients which are twice the regional average. If cementation beats petroleum in this ‘race for space’ there may be no field to produce, as the petroleum may not be recoverable from the low quality reservoir. We believe that the processes of petroleum generation/migration and cementation may share a common cause. Both processes are commonly associated with major changes within a basin: rapid burial/heating of the sediment pile and/or major faulting which changes the basin ‘plumbing’.

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