Petroleum Geoscience; October 2003; v. 9; no. 4;
p. 357-374; DOI: 10.1144/1354-079303-569
© 2003 Geological Society of London
Indicators of hot fluid migration in sedimentary basins: evidence from the UK Atlantic Margin
H. L. Wycherley1,
J. Parnell1,
G. R. Watt1,
H. Chen1 and
A. J. Boyce2
1 Geofluids
Research Group, Department of Geology & Petroleum Geology,
University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB24 3UE,
UK (e-mail: h.wycherley@abdn.ac.
uk)
2 Scottish Universities Environmental Research
Centre (SUERC), Scottish Enterprise Technology Park, Rankine
Avenue,Glasgow G75 0QF,
UK
Microthermometric,
petrographic and isotopic methods have been used to detect evidence for
hot fluid flow in Mesozoic and Tertiary sediments from the NW UK
continental margin, West of Shetland. New data presented here show that
temperatures are hotter by c. 40°C in Tertiary samples than
in the underlying Jurassic and Cretaceous sediments in wells 204/28-1,
206/5-2, 208/27-1, especially in cements from samples as young as
mid–upper Eocene in age. Paleocene samples can be discriminated
from older (Jurassic and Cretaceous) and younger (Eocene) sandstones on
the basis of silica cement morphology and cathodoluminescence zonation.
Jurassic, Cretaceous and Eocene quartz cements show oscillatory zoning
as a consequence of relatively slow burial cementation. In direct
contrast, rapid precipitation of silica cements from the cooling of hot
fluids has produced unzoned cements in all but one Paleocene sample. No
evidence for unzoned quartz cements was noted in any pre-Paleocene or
Eocene samples. The restriction of hot fluid inclusions and unzoned
cements to the Paleocene and post-Paleocene is consistent with lateral
focusing of hot fluids. Isotopic data from kaolinites indicate that
these fluids are best represented by mixtures of Mesozoic or Tertiary
meteoric waters and marine porewaters that have undergone isotopic
alteration through interaction with volcanic material. Our results
indicate that hot fluid flow occurred over a relatively long time-scale
(i.e. several million years), which may have important consequences for
the degradation of reservoired hydrocarbons in West of Shetland
Paleocene
plays.
KEYWORDS: West of
Shetland, Tertiary, cements, quartz
zoning, palaeotemperature
Copyright © 2009 by Geological Society of London