Heavy Mineral Stratigraphy of the Lower Clair Group Succession, Clair Field, United Kingdom Continental Shelf
(UKCS)
Morton, Andrew1,
Claire Hallsworth1, Simon Payne2, Dave Walder2,
Ewan Laws2
(1) HM Research
Associates, Loughborough,
United Kingdom (2) BP Exploration,Aberdeen, United Kingdom
The
Devonian-Carboniferous reservoir succession in the Clair Field, located west of
Shetland on the UK
continental shelf, comprises over 1000 m of clastic
sediment deposited in a range of fluvial, lacustrine
and aeolian environments. Owing to the unfavourable depositional conditions, palynomorphs
and microfossils are almost entirely absent, precluding development of a
high-resolution biostratigraphic framework for
reservoir correlation. An alternative approach to reservoir subdivision and
correlation is therefore necessary in order to establish a viable reservoir
model prior to field development. Heavy mineral analysis, which subdivides clastic successions on the basis of changes in provenance
and sediment transport history, has proved successful in establishing a
high-resolution correlation framework for the Clair Field. This paper
concentrates on the heavy mineral stratigraphy of the
Lower Clair Group, which is the target for the first phase of the field
development. The key parameters that have been used to erect the correlation
framework are provenance-sensitive ratios of heavy minerals (notably garnet:zircon, rutile:zircon
and apatite:tourmaline), grain morphology (apatite
roundness) and mineral chemistry (garnet composition). The Lower Clair/Upper
Clair boundary is a first-order heavy mineral event related to a major change
in provenance. Six major units (I-VI) and a number of subunits have been recognised within the Lower Clair Group, boundaries being
related to more subtle changes in provenance and sediment transport history.