Aspects of Diagenesis 1979
DOI: 10.2110/pec.79.26.0175
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The Role of Secondary Porosity in the Course of Sandstone Diagenesis

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Cited by 279 publications
(227 citation statements)
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“…Whereas, the data with higher δ 13 C values (about 1.5‰, VPDB; Fig. 12) probably indicate carbon derivation within microbial methanogenesis zone, bacterial fermentation and contribution from atmospheric CO 2 (Irwin and Hurst, 1983;Morad et al, 1998 (Bjørlykke, 2014;Burley and Kantorowicz, 1986;Giles, 1987;Schmidt, 1979;Taylor et al, 2010). Perhaps more importantly is whether there are sufficient organic acid to dissolve the carbonate cements or significant fluid flow with undersaturated solutions to replenish the system (e.g.…”
Section: Origin Of Carbonate Cementsmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Whereas, the data with higher δ 13 C values (about 1.5‰, VPDB; Fig. 12) probably indicate carbon derivation within microbial methanogenesis zone, bacterial fermentation and contribution from atmospheric CO 2 (Irwin and Hurst, 1983;Morad et al, 1998 (Bjørlykke, 2014;Burley and Kantorowicz, 1986;Giles, 1987;Schmidt, 1979;Taylor et al, 2010). Perhaps more importantly is whether there are sufficient organic acid to dissolve the carbonate cements or significant fluid flow with undersaturated solutions to replenish the system (e.g.…”
Section: Origin Of Carbonate Cementsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Three criteria for identification of secondary porosity after the dissolution of carbonate cements in sandstones have been proposed by Schmidt (1979). These criteria include the occurrence of oversized pores due to the dissolution of grain-replacive carbonate cements, partially dissolved carbonate cements with etched outlines, and grain-replacive carbonates surrounded by open pores.…”
Section: Role In Reservoir Qualitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Accurate porosity information is required for characterizing a reservoir, especially due to its role in evaluating the volume of hydrocarbon stored in the pore spaces located within sand grains (Schmidt and McDonald 1980). Porosity distribution value across the reservoir sand H10 ranges from 0.25 to 0.32, while the value ranges from 0.28 to 0.32 and 0.29 to 0.34 in G20 and E40 sands, respectively (Figs.…”
Section: Reservoir Property Mapsmentioning
confidence: 99%