Title of article
Composition, porosity, and reservoir potential of the Middle Jurassic Kashafrud Formation, northeast Iran
Author/Authors
Poursoltani، نويسنده , , Mehdi Reza and Gibling، نويسنده , , Martin R.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
17
From page
1094
To page
1110
Abstract
In the Kopet-Dagh Basin of Iran, deep-sea sandstones and shales of the Middle Jurassic Kashafrud Formation are disconformably overlain by hydrocarbon-bearing carbonates of Upper Jurassic and Cretaceous age. To explore the reservoir potential of the sandstones, we studied their burial history using more than 500 thin sections, supplemented by heavy mineral analysis, microprobe analysis, porosity and permeability determination, and vitrinite reflectance.
ndstones are arkosic and lithic arenites, rich in sedimentary and volcanic rock fragments. Quartz overgrowths and pore-filling carbonate cements (calcite, dolomite, siderite and ankerite) occluded most of the porosity during early to deep burial, assisted by early compaction that improved packing and fractured quartz grains. Iron oxides are prominent as alteration products of framework grains, probably reflecting source-area weathering prior to deposition, and locally as pore fills. Minor cements include pore-filling clays, pyrite, authigenic albite and K-feldspar, and barite. Existing porosity is secondary, resulting largely from dissolution of feldspars, micas, and rock fragments, with some fracture porosity. Porosity and permeability of six samples averages 3.2% and 0.0023 mD, respectively, and 150 thin-section point counts averaged 2.7% porosity. Reflectance of vitrinite in eight sandstone samples yielded values of 0.64–0.83%, in the early mature to mature stage of hydrocarbon generation, within the oil window.
rud Formation petrographic trends were compared with trends from first-cycle basins elsewhere in the world. Inferred burial conditions accord with the maturation data, suggesting only a moderate thermal regime during burial. Some fractures, iron oxide cements, and dissolution may reflect Cenozoic tectonism and uplift that created the Kopet-Dagh Mountains. The low porosity and permeability levels of Kashafrud Formation sandstones suggest only a modest reservoir potential. For such tight sandstones, fractures may enhance the reservoir potential.
Keywords
petrography , Kopet-dagh basin , Iran , Kashafrud Formation , Jurassic , Hydrocarbons , porosity , diagenesis , Permeability
Journal title
Marine and Petroleum Geology
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Marine and Petroleum Geology
Record number
2252342
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