DYNAMIC PLANET WEEK 11 Flashcards

1
Q

What is diagenesis?

A

Series of processes that modify sediment during its lithification (from greek “lithos”: rock) from loose sediment into rock.

Processes begin at surface T and P immediately following deposition of the sediment and continue during elevation of T and P during burial

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Why is diagenesis important?

A

-Important processes in the destruction of primary porosity and generation of secondary porosity in reservoirs

  • Critical to the maturation of organic material into oil and gas in source rocks.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

What are the differences between diagenesis and metamorphism?

A

Metamorphism involves taking the rock up to a T and P in which individual minerals cannot exist at the same phase: it involves the solid state change in crystal structure of rocks
Begins at different T and P for different minerals
Diagenesis involves all changes to the sediment up to (but not including) the point at which T and P is too high for the mineral phases to exist.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

What occurs during diagenesis?

A

Conversion of loose sediment grains into rock
-achieved by the growth of minerals in the pore spaces between the grains, which “cement” the grains together
pore space in sediments (and sedimentary rocks) are what make them (potential) reservoirs for aquafer systems, oil and gas, and CO2.
Diagenesis involves changes in the amount of pore space (e.g. the example above), so these processes are important for understanding porosity and permeability in fluid reservoir systems.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

What is mechanical compaction? What occurs as a result of it?

A

Mechanical compaction by overburden causes grain reorganisation/rotation in order to reduce volume
rock volume is not reduced, but pore-space is reduced
grains are better “packed”
causes “dewatering” – expulsion of water that occupied the pore space. (sandstone dykes are evidence of this)

Grains typically reorganise such that the long-axis moves to become perpendicular to compaction

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Compare sand to silts and clays composition? How does this influence compaction?

A

Sand is predominantly composed of quartz grains lacking habit (often rounded)
-compact into sandstones may lose 10% vertical thickness
-significant pore space maintained by the rigid quartz grains

Whereas silts and clays have larger quantities of clay minerals and micas which have a “platy” morphology.
-true clays may compact into mudstones, and lose up to 90% vertical thickness
-majority of original pore space can be lost

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

What is pressure solution?

A

another manner in which compaction by overburden can reduce rock thickness.
-material at grain contacts perpendicular to compaction / shortening dissolve
-material re-precipitates as cement at grain contacts parallel to compaction / shortening.
-net result is also porosity loss.
-common in carbonates
-requires greater depths of burial for clastic sedimentary rocks.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

What is dissolution?

A

caused by changes in T and P, and or the composition of pore-water, which results in the mineral being more stable in solution

Dissolution without reprecipitation occurs in systems which are subjected to prolonged pumping of exotic pore-water, with an abundant fresh supply
-common in carbonates, less common in clastic sedimentary rocks

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

What is cementation? What are some common cements?

A

the process by which chemical precipitates (new crystals) form in the pores of a sediment or rock and bind the grains together.

Cementation reduces primary porosity by filling in the pore spaces between the grains.

Common= quartz, carbonates and clays

the sources of cement can be local or external (authigenetic)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

What are concretions?

A

typically spherical masses of sediment more strongly cemented than the surrounding volume.

Typically spherical, because they grow from a point nucleus

Often associated with presence of organic material, which reacts (either during its lifetime, or during its decomposition) with the surrounding chemistry

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

What is recrystallisation? Why does it happen?

A

refers to the reorientation of the same crystal lattices in mineral grains

result of solution and reprecipitation of the same mineral phase already present.

does not usually involve net pore space change

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

When does mineral replacement?

A

occurs when a newly formed mineral replaces a preexisting one in situ

Changes in polymorph or ion exchange leading to the formation of new minerals, can lead to changes in volume, which can destroy or increase porosity

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

What is dolomitisation?

A

an example of mineral replacement

this diagenetic processes increases porosity (blue), which is good for hydrocarbon or water subsurface storage

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

The degree to these different diagenetic processes operate is a function of?

A

-original composition of the sediment
-pressure due to burial
-temperature due to burial
-composition and availability of pore fluids
-porosity and permeability
latter two determine the rate at which ion exchange can happen due to concentration gradients at grain boundaries

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

What are effects of diagenesis?

A

Burial diagenesis largely leads to destruction in porosity
Culminating in metamorphism: total porosity destruction
But is crucial to the maturation of oil and gas

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

What is metamorphism?

A

“meta”= change and “morph”= shape

Changes in the mineralogy and texture (shape and size of minerals) that occur in the solid state (strictly no melting).

Response to the addition of thermal energy (heat) and mechanical energy (work)… change to an equilibrium state.

It doesn’t change the bulk chemical composition of the rock
-closed system process

17
Q

What are the exceptions to metamorphism?

A

Volatiles (H2O & CO2) are lost (H2O abundant in crystal structure of clays, CO2). They can also sometime be added.

Metasomatism – metamorphism caused by the addition or removal of elements by the pumping of hot, saturated pore waters.

18
Q

What happens during metamorphism?

A
  1. Recrystallisation – existing minerals adopt new textures (shapes and sizes). Some minerals adopt a preferred orientation.
  2. Neomineralisation – the formation of new minerals at the expense of existing ones (new formulae and polymorphs).
    Involves chemical reactions between minerals (± fluid)
19
Q

Compare metamorphic rocks to igneous and sedimentary rocks?

A

volumetrically more abundant in the Earth’s crust than igneous and sedimentary rocks put together

20
Q

What is the importance of metamorphic rocks?

A

more abundant in Earth’s crust than igneous and sedimentary rocks

host economically important mineral deposits

tend not to undergo retrograde metamorphism (revert back to the original rock type when they are exhumed and cooled)= can be studied to understand what processes operate deep inside the Earth.

21
Q

What occurs to the size of crystals when you increase metamorphic grade?

A

Increase
- depends on grain size of protolith
(metamorphic rocks can be derived from any kind of precursor (protolith)

22
Q

What are the 2 main agents of metamorphism?

A
  1. temperature
    -“Original heat” (the Geothermal Gradient)
    varies strongly according to tectonic setting
    -“Local heat” (igneous intrusions)
    can locally cause metamorphism
  2. Stress
    -“Original heat” (the Geothermal Gradient)
    increases with depth but doesnt really
    vary with tectonic setting
    -“Local heat” (igneous intrusions)
    doesnt cause metamorphism but can influence the texture of metamorphic rock
23
Q

How does “original heat” cause metamorphism?

A

The geothermal gradient (accretionary and differentiation kinetic energy, radioactive decay) is on average 25-30ºC/km.

But it is variable depending on tectonic setting but burial results increasing T

24
Q

How does local heat (igneous intrusions) cause metamorphism?

A

Intense local heat source
Disturbs the “normal” geothermal gradient.
Strong, but localised metamorphic effects.

25
Q

What is Stress?

A

defined as the average force per unit area that some particle of a body exerts on an adjacent particle, across an imaginary surface that separates them
-Stress (S) = Force (F) / Area (A).

Therefore the behaviour of material is measured against units of stress (Pascals=Newtons/m2) rather than force.

26
Q

What is load pressure?

A

‘lithostatic stress or confining stress’
Results from the weight of overlying rock.
Stress acts uniformly in every direction
(Analogous to the hydrostatic pressure beneath a head of water)

27
Q

Does load pressure vary with tectonic setting?

A

Yes, but negligibly compared to temperature.
By approx. 3.5x108 Pa
(3.5 Kbar)/km

28
Q

What is deviatoric stress?

A

In the real 3D world (which always includes gravity), there will always be three principal, perpendicular stresses acting on an object
б1 the maximum principal stress
б2 the intermediate principal stress
б3 the minimum principal stress

Caused by lateral transmission of horizontal tectonic forces through the solid Earth’s crust

29
Q

How does deviatoric stress vary at plate boundaries?

A

Compressive force at convergent plate margins= deviatoric stress.
Extensional force at divergent plate margins =deviatoric stress.

Results in fracturing (faulting) in cold, brittle upper crust.

Results in plastic deformation (folding) in warm ductile middle & lower crust. (Heat reduces the strength of rock.)

30
Q

Do deviatoric stresses have an effect on mineral stabilities?

A

have minimal effect

31
Q

does metamorphism have an effect on texture?

A

major effect
1. Rotation and regrowth of flaky minerals into parallelism, resulting in the development of cleavage perpendicular to б1:
-In medium/coarse-grained rocks, cleavage is usually termed ‘schistosity’.

  1. Another type of tectonic fabric is a lineation
    -Lineations often record stretching strains
32
Q

What are metamorphic facies?

A

Metamorphic facies are sets of mineral assemblages that form under distinct pressure and temperature fields.

33
Q

What 3 categories can metamorphism be divided into?

A
  1. regional metamorphism where T and P increase.
  2. Contact metamorphism where T increases and P does not.
  3. Dynamic metamorphism where P increases but T does not.
34
Q

What is regional metamorphism?

A

Most common way of metamorphosing rock is to thicken the crust

-Usually via subduction of one crustal slab beneath another or Ocean-continent or continent-continent collision.
Termed “Regional metamorphism”

Grainsize increases with increasing T and P.

Development of cleavage to schistosity with increasing T and P.

35
Q

What is the concept of metamorphic grade?

A

As the protolith (parent rock) is buried, minerals transform from one into the other with increasing rank.
Form three assemblages