Reservoir Quality of Upper Jurassic Corallian Sandstones, Weald Basin, UK



Barshep, Dinfa Vincent and Worden, Richard Henry ORCID: 0000-0002-4686-9428
(2021) Reservoir Quality of Upper Jurassic Corallian Sandstones, Weald Basin, UK. GEOSCIENCES, 11 (11). p. 446.

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Abstract

<jats:p>The Upper Jurassic, shallow marine Corallian sandstones of the Weald Basin, UK, are significant onshore reservoirs due to their future potential for carbon capture and storage (CCS) and hydrogen storage. These reservoir rocks, buried to no deeper than 1700 m before uplift to 850 to 900 m at the present time, also provide an opportunity to study the pivotal role of shallow marine sandstone eodiagenesis. With little evidence of compaction, these rocks show low to moderate porosity for their relatively shallow burial depths. Their porosity ranges from 0.8 to 30% with an average of 12.6% and permeability range from 0.01 to 887 mD with an average of 31 mD. The Corallian sandstones of the Weald Basin are relatively poorly studied; consequently, there is a paucity of data on their reservoir quality which limits any ability to predict porosity and permeability away from wells. This study presents a potential first in the examination of diagenetic controls of reservoir quality of the Corallian sandstones, of the Weald Basin’s Palmers Wood and Bletchingley oil fields, using a combination of core analysis, sedimentary core logs, petrography, wireline analysis, SEM-EDS analysis and geochemical analysis to understand the extent of diagenetic evolution of the sandstones and its effects on reservoir quality. The analyses show a dominant quartz arenite lithology with minor feldspars, bioclasts, Fe-ooids and extra-basinal lithic grains. We conclude that little compactional porosity-loss occurred with cementation being the main process that caused porosity-loss. Early calcite cement, from neomorphism of contemporaneously deposited bioclasts, represents the majority of the early cement, which subsequently prevented mechanical compaction. Calcite cement is also interpreted to have formed during burial from decarboxylation-derived CO2 during source rock maturation. Other cements include the Fe-clay berthierine, apatite, pyrite, dolomite, siderite, quartz, illite and kaolinite. Reservoir quality in the Corallian sandstones show no significant depositional textural controls; it was reduced by dominant calcite cementation, locally preserved by berthierine grain coats that inhibited quartz cement and enhanced by detrital grain dissolution as well as cement dissolution. Reservoir quality in the Corallian sandstones can therefore be predicted by considering abundance of calcite cement from bioclasts, organically derived CO2 and Fe-clay coats.</jats:p>

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Corallian sandstones, reservoir quality, bioclastic sandstones, early carbonate cementation, shallow reservoirs, berthierine grain-coats, low temperature quartz cement
Divisions: Faculty of Science and Engineering > School of Environmental Sciences
Depositing User: Symplectic Admin
Date Deposited: 29 Oct 2021 10:19
Last Modified: 18 Jan 2023 21:25
DOI: 10.3390/geosciences11110446
Related URLs:
URI: https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/3142043