Abstract: Upper Smackover Depositional Model
-- Kildare Field,
Cass County, Texas
BARRETT, DAVID
British-Borneo Exploration, Inc.,
Houston, TX
One key to predicting trends in the Upper Smackover is to use
a depositional model
that addresses the fundamental interrelationships
among facies, cycles, stacking patterns, structural timing, and porosity/permeability.
The Kildare Field
model
does this and suggests that a complete analysis
of the above characteristics should help to predict porosity trends on
a subregional basis.
At Kildare Field, the depositional model
is a shallow-water ooid shoal
complex deposited on a paleobathymetric high that is rimmed by low relief
coral-algal reefs. The sub-facies identified are ooid grainstones, ooid
siliciclastic grainstones, ooid intraclast grainstones, ooid peloid grainstones,
and ooid rhodolith grainstones, all overlying lower-energy mixed grainstones.
Other sub-facies are inner shelf-lagoon mixed packstones and coralalgal
reef framestone/bindstones. Specific subenvironments of the ooid shoal
complex are the inner shoal, tidal channel, tidal delta, outer shoal, inner
shelf-lagoon, and coral-algal reef. Each sub-facies has a distinct porosity/permeability
profile.
Deposition occurs as six high-frequency shallowing-upward cycles of high-energy grainstones progressing from onlap to aggradation to progradation. The cycles and stacking patterns
occurred in response to penecontemporaneous sedimentation during structural growth of the underlying salt anticline, and/or high-frequency glacioeustacy.
Good porosity and permeability occur as interparticle porosity occasionally enhanced by dissolution in slightly emergent areas. Poor porosity and permeability are caused by early precipitation of pore-filling blocky calcite spar from a freshwater phreatic lens. Late occlusion occurs by precipitation of saddle dolomite, poikilotopic calcite, and anhydrite.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90932©1998 GCAGS/GCS-SEPM Meeting, Corpus Christi, Texas