Subseismic-Scale Reservoir Deformation
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Structural and petrophysical effects of overthrusting on highly porous sandstones: the Aztec Sandstone in the Buffington window, SE Nevada, USA
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Published:January 01, 2018
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CiteCitation
Luisa F. Zuluaga, Haakon Fossen, Gregory Ballas, Atle Rotevatn, 2018. "Structural and petrophysical effects of overthrusting on highly porous sandstones: the Aztec Sandstone in the Buffington window, SE Nevada, USA", Subseismic-Scale Reservoir Deformation, M. Ashton, S. J. Dee, O. P. Wennberg
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Abstract
Little is known about the effect of thrusting on lithological and petrophysical properties of reservoir sandstone. Here we use field observations, probe permeability measurements and thin-section analysis along ten transects from the Muddy Mountain thrust contact downwards into the underlying Jurassic Aztec Sandstone to evaluate the nature and extent of petrophysical and microstructural changes caused by the thrusting. The results reveal a decimetre- to metre-thick low-permeable (≤50 mD) and indurated (0–3% porosity) zone immediately beneath the thrust contact in which dominant microscale processes, in decreasing order of importance, are (1) cataclasis with local fault gouge formation; (2) pressure solution; and (3) very limited cementation. From this narrow zone the petrophysical and microstructural effect of the thrusting decreases gradually downwards into a friable, highly porous (c. 25%) and permeable (≤2 D) sandstone some 50–150 m below the thrust, in which strain is localized into deformation band populations. In general, the petrophysical properties of the sandstone as a result of overthrusting reveal little impact in overall primary reservoir quality below some tens of metres into the footwall, except for the relatively minor baffling effect of deformation bands.
- Aztec Sandstone
- backscattering
- cataclasis
- cathodoluminescence
- clastic rocks
- contraction
- controls
- deformation
- diffusion
- effects
- electron microscopy data
- faults
- foot wall
- grain size
- host rocks
- Jurassic
- mass transfer
- mechanism
- Mesozoic
- microscope methods
- Nevada
- overthrust faults
- permeability
- petrography
- physical properties
- porosity
- porous materials
- reservoir properties
- reservoir rocks
- sampling
- sandstone
- sedimentary rocks
- SEM data
- size distribution
- spatial distribution
- stratigraphy
- structural analysis
- tectonics
- temporal distribution
- thrust faults
- United States
- windows
- Buffington Window
- Muddy Mountain Nappe