Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T08:59:12.914Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Radiogenic and stable isotope evidence for age and origin of authigenic illites in the Rotliegend, southern North Sea

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 July 2018

K. Ziegler
Affiliation:
Postgraduate Research Institute for Sedimentology, The University, Whiteknights, PO Box 227, Reading RG6 2AB, Berkshire, UK
B. W. Sellwood
Affiliation:
Postgraduate Research Institute for Sedimentology, The University, Whiteknights, PO Box 227, Reading RG6 2AB, Berkshire, UK
A. E. Fallick
Affiliation:
Scottish Universities Research and Reactor Centre, East Kilbride, Glasgow G75 0QU, UK

Abstract

Aeolian sandstones of the Lower Permian Leman Formation (Rotliegend Group) provide the best gas reservoir in the southern North Sea, but permeability is greatly reduced by the presence of authigenic fibrous illites. New radiogenic (K/Ar) and stable (oxygen and hydrogen) isotope data are presented for fibrous illite cements (<0.1 µm), so that the absolute timing and controlling diagenetic factors for their formation can be more fully evaluated. Thus, the expected quality of gas reservoirs in the southern North Sea might be better predicted. Samples have been analysed from five wells in areas with contrasting structural evolution: the Sole Pit Basin, and the Indefatigable Shelf. The K/Ar ages of between 160 and 190 Ma have been obtained from the Indefatigable Shelf illites, and between 120 and 160 Ma for those from the Sole Pit Basin, reflecting different times of basin inversion. These K/Ar ages are interpreted by reference to burial/thermal models for each well. The temperature of illite precipitation falls between 88 and 140°C. Calculated pore-fluid compositions derived from oxygen and hydrogen isotopic analyses give values of ∼ + 1 to +9‰ (SMOW) δ18O and +1 to −50‰ (SMOW) δD. The illite δD values have probably been affected by isotopic exchange and fractionation with the surrounding gaseous hydrocarbon. The δ18O values reflect the degree to which evaporative concentration had affected Zechstein marine waters which subsequently invaded the Leman Sandstone. Comparisons between δ18O and δD values in clays and in formation water for the Leman Field suggest that oxygen isotope exchange might have taken place, and that the initial K+ and radiogenic 40Ar contents within illites may have been modified.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1994

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ayalon, A. & Longstaffe, F.J. (1988) Oxygen-isotope studies of diagenesis and porewater evolution in the western Canada sedimentary basin: evidence from the Upper Cretaceous basal Belly River sandstone, Alberta. J. Sed. Pet. 58, 489505.Google Scholar
Bird, M.I. & Chivas, A.R. (1988) Stable-isotope evidence for low-temperature kaolinitic weathering and postformational hydrogen-isotope exchange in Permian kaolinites. Chem. Geol. (Isotope Geoscience Section) 72, 249265.Google Scholar
Borthwick, J. & Harmon, R.S. (1982) A note regarding ClF3 as an alternative to BrF5 for oxygen isotope analysis. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 46, 16651668.Google Scholar
Clayton, R.N. & Mayeda, T.K. (1963) The use of bromine pentafluoride in the extraction of oxygen from oxides and silicates for isotopic analysis. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 27, 4352.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eberl, D.D. & Środoń, J. (1988) Ostwald ripening and interparticle diffraction effects for illite crystals. Am. Miner. 73, 13351345.Google Scholar
Eseinger, E.V., & Yen, H.-W. (1981) Mineralogy, O18/O16 and D/H ratios of clay-rich sediments from Deep Sea Drilling Project site 180, Alcutian Trench. Clays Clay Miner. 29, 309315.Google Scholar
Fallick, A.E., Haszeldine, R.S. & Pearson, M.J. (1993a) Overview of clay mineral stable isotope (δ18O, δD) systematics in the North, N. Sea. Abstracts: Diagenesis, Overpressure and Reservoir Quality. Mineralogical Society (Clay Minerals Group) Meeting, Cambridge, 1993 p. 26.Google Scholar
Fallick, A.E., Macaulay, C.I. & Haszeldine, R.S. (1993b) Implications of linearly correlated oxygen and hydrogen isotopic compositions for kaolinite and illite in the Magnus Sandstone, North Sea. Clays Clay Miner. 41, 122129.Google Scholar
Faaer, E. (1987) Zur Isotopengeochemie gasf6rmiger Kohlenwasserstoffe. Erdol, Erdgas, Kohle 103/5, 210218.Google Scholar
Hamilton, P.J., Kelley, S. & Fallick, A.E. (1989) K-Ar dating of illite in hydrocarbon reservoirs. Clay Miner. 24, 215231.Google Scholar
Hamilton, P.J., Giles, M.R. & Ainsworxn, P. (1992) K-Ar dating of illites in Brent Group reservoirs: a regional perspective. Pp. 377-400 in: Geology of the Brent Group (Morton, A.C., Haszeldine, R.S., Giles, M.R. & Brown, S., editors). Geol. Soc. Spec. Publ. 61.Google Scholar
James, A.T. & Baker, D.R. (1976) Oxygen isotope exchange between illite and water at 22°C. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 40, 235239.Google Scholar
Jenkin, G.R.T. (1988) Stable isotope studies in Caledonides of SW Connemara, Ireland. PhD thesis, Univ. Glasgow, UK.Google Scholar
Knauth, L.P. & Beeunas, M.A. (1986) Isotope geochemistry of fluid inclusions in Permian halite with implications for the isotopic history of ocean water and the origin of saline formation waters. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 50, 419433.Google Scholar
Lee, M. (1984) Diagenesis of the Permian Rotliegend Sandstone, North Sea.” K-Ar, 180/160 and petrographic evidence. PhD thesis, Case Western Reserve Univ., Ohio, USA.Google Scholar
Lee, M., Aronson, J.L. & Savin, S.M. (1985) K/Ar Dating of Time of Gas Emplacement in Rotliegendes Sandstone, Netherlands. AAPG Bull. 69/9, 13811385.Google Scholar
Longstaffe, F.J. (1989) Stable isotopes as tracers in clastic diagenesis. Pp. 210-277 in: Short Course in Burial Diagenesis (Hutcheon, I.T., editor). Mineralogical Association of Canada, Short Course Series 15.Google Scholar
Longstaffe, F.J. & Ayalon, A. (1987) Oxygen-isotope studies of clastic diagenesis in the Lower Cretaceous Viking Formation, Alberta: implications for the role of meteoric water. Pp. 277-296 in: The Diagenesis of Sedimentary Sequences (Marshall, , editor). Geol. Soc. Spec. Publ. 36.Google Scholar
Longstaffe, F.J. & Ayalon, A. (1990) Hydrogen-isotope geochemistry of diagenetic clay minerals from Cretaceous sandstones, Alberta, Canada: evidence for exchange. Appl. Geochem. 5, 657–668.Google Scholar
O'Neil, J.R. & Kharaka, Y.K. (1976) Hydrogen and oxygen isotope exchange reactions between clay minerals and water. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 40, 241246.Google Scholar
O'Neil, J.R. & Truesdell, A.H. (1991) Oxygen isotope ffactionation studies of solute-water interactions. Pp. 17- 25 in: Stable Isotope Geochemistry: A Tribute to Samuel Epstein (Taylor, H.P., O'Neil, J.R. & Kaplan, I.R., editors). The Geochem. Society, Spec. Publ. 3.Google Scholar
Pollasrro, R.M. (1990) The illite/smectite geothermometer— Concepts, methodology, and applications to basin history and hydrocarbon generation. Pp. 1-18 in: Applications of Thermal Maturity Studies to Energy Exploration. (Nuccio, , Barker, , editors). SEPM.Google Scholar
Purvls, K. (1992) Lower Permian Rotliegendes Sandstones, Southern North Sea: a case study of sandstone diagenesis in evaporate-associated sequences. Sed. Geol. 77, 155-171.Google Scholar
Refson, K. & Mcconnell, J.D.C. (1993) Water-clay interactions. Abstract: Diagenesis, Overpressure and Reservoir Quality. Mineralogical Society (Clay Minerals Group) Meeting, Cambridge, 1993, p. 3.Google Scholar
Robinson, A.G., Coleman, M.L. & Gluyas, J.G. (1993) The Age of Illite Cement Growth, Village Fields Area, Southern North Sea: Evidence from K-Ar Ages and 18O/16O Ratios. AAPG Bull. 77/1, 6880.Google Scholar
Savin, S.M. & Lee, M. (1988) Isotopic studies of phyllosilicates. Pp. 189-223 in: Hydrous Phyllosilicates (Exclusive of Micas) (Bailey, S.W., editor). Reviews in Mineralogy 19, Min. Soc. of America, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Sullivan, M.D. (1991) Diagenetic study of the Lower Permian Rotliegend Sandstone, Leman Field, Southern North Sea. PhD thesis, Univ. Glasgow, UK.Google Scholar
Sullivan, M.D., Haszeldine, R.S., Boyce, A.J., Rogers, G. & FALLIC∼ A.E. (1994) Late anhydrite cements mark basin inversion: isotopic and formation water evidence, Rotliegend Sandstone, North Sea. Mar. Petrol. Geol. 11/ 1, 4654.Google Scholar
Taylor, J.C.M. & COLTER V,S. (1975) Zechstein of the English sector of the Southern North Sea Basin. Pp. 249- 259 in: Petroleum and the Continental Shelf of North-West Europe. Vol. 1, Geology. (Woodland, , editor). Applied Science Publishers Ltd., England.Google Scholar
Weaver, C.E. (1989) Clays, Muds, and Shales. Developments in Sedimentology 44, Elsevier, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Yeh, H.-W. & Eslinger, E.V. (1986) Oxygen isotopes and the extent of diagenesis of clay minerals during sedimentation and burial in the sea. Clays Clay Miner. 34, 403406.Google Scholar
Ziegler, K. (1993) Diagenetic and Geochemical History of the Rotliegend of the Southern North Sea (UK Sector): A comparative study. PhD thesis, Reading Univ., UK.Google Scholar