Provenance of the Upper Cretaceous Lange-Lysing deep-marine sandstone in the Norwegian Sea: with implication for reservoir quality.

Master's thesis in Petroleum Geosciences Engineering The provenance and reservoir properties of Upper Cretaceous Lange-Lysing sandstone in the Norwegian Sea have been determined by using integrated whole-rock geochemical, petrographic and detrital zircon U-Pb age dating by LA- ICP-MS. Three dif...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tegle, Kristina Waagbø
Other Authors: Augustsson, Carita, Ravnås, Rodmar
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Stavanger, Norway 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2464518
Description
Summary:Master's thesis in Petroleum Geosciences Engineering The provenance and reservoir properties of Upper Cretaceous Lange-Lysing sandstone in the Norwegian Sea have been determined by using integrated whole-rock geochemical, petrographic and detrital zircon U-Pb age dating by LA- ICP-MS. Three different provenance signatures are revealed within three geographical areas containing the Lange-Lysing succession. They have contributed to significant response on diagenesis, which gives implication for reservoir properties, whereby the petrographic data expose several controls on porosity development, including textural and mineralogical factors. (1) Quartzofeldspathic petrofacies in the Møre Margin are interpreted to have the highest potential as hydrocarbon reservoir due to better sorting and larger grain size, combined with preservation of intergranular and intragranular porosity, not occluded by cement. The zircon grains were derived from felsic sources in the Western Gneiss Region of Baltica, due to a prominent age peak that closely corresponds with the Sveoconorwegian (1000-950 Ma) and the Gothian orogenies (1700-1500 Ma). (2) Sandstone of the quartzolithic petrofacies from the Halten-Dønna Terrace has smaller grain size and is less sorted than the quartzofeldspathic petrofacies, yielding a lower reservoir quality. The detritus is suggested to have been sourced from more mixed ?andesitic-felsic rocks. The zircon grains derived from the Paleozoic Caledonian Nappe Domain of western Baltica and from the Lofoten Islands or Western Tromsø Basement Complex in northern Norway because of a dominance of Early Proterozoic crust-forming zircon grains (1800-1750 Ma) and an Archean component. (3) The main diagenetic features of the quartzarenitic petrofacies in the deeper Vøring Basin includes mechanical and chemical compaction, precipitation and replacement of quartz overgrowth, kaolinite, clay minerals, iron oxide and formation of secondary porosity due to dissolution of labile minerals. Grain coating of authigenic clay ...