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Predicting Fracture and Porosity Evolution in Dolostone*

By

Julia F.W. Gale1, Robert H. Lander2, and Robert M. Reed1

 

Search and Discovery Article #40208 (2006)

Posted August 10, 2006

 

*Oral presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, Apil 9-12, 2006

 

Click to view presentation in PDF format (4.4 mb).

 

1Bureau of Economic Geology, Jackson School of Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX ([email protected])

2Geocosm LLC, Austin, TX

 

Abstract 

Fracture growth and diagenesis interact to create and destroy fracture porosity in dolostones and thereby affect fluid-flow properties in these important hydrocarbon reservoir rocks. We have observed dolomite crystals that bridge fracture walls in several dolostones. Similar quartz-bridge morphologies in fractured sandstones have been replicated using geometric crystal growth models that consider anisotropies in growth rates associated with crystallographic orientation, euhedral versus non-euhedral nucleation surfaces, and the influence of repeated episodes of crystal breakage during incremental fracture opening. Our analysis of detailed SEM-CL images from fractured dolostones suggests that similar linked mechanical and chemical processes could cause the formation of dolomite bridges.  

To evaluate this hypothesis we developed a geometric crystal growth model for dolomite fracture fill and evaluated the ability of the model to replicate microstructures within dolomite fracture cement. We assumed equivalent growth rates along each euhedral growth face (as suggested by SEM-CL images, which show little growth Previous HitanisotropyTop) and 20 times faster growth rates on non-euhedral versus euhedral surfaces on the basis of analogy with quartz (comparable data are lacking for dolomite). Several model runs were completed with different fracture-opening rates. The results were compared with natural fracture morphologies, producing the anticipated replication of bridges and lining cement morphologies. We also found that modeled dolomite bridges commonly have rhombic shapes even when they are subjected to multiple crystal breakage episodes. In addition, the crystal growth model predicts morphologies that are analogous to features in SEM-CL images that superficially appear to be caused by crystal dissolution.

 

Selected Figures 

Ordovician Knox dolostone (left); Cretaceous Travis Peak Sandstone (right). Hypothesis: Dolomite and quartz cement structures in fractures form due to equivalent processes. 

Sealed Fractures: Elenburger. 

Dolomite bridge.