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Geological Society, London, Special Publications; 1996; v. 104; p. 87-113;
DOI: 10.1144/GSL.SP.1996.104.01.07
© 1996 Geological Society of London

Influence of relative sea-level on facies and reservoir geometry of the Middle Jurassic lower Brent Group, UK North Viking Graben

David C. Jennette1,2 & Cheyenne O. Riley1,3

1 Esso EXPRO UK Ltd. Esso House, Victoria St, London SW1E 5JW, UK
2 Exxon Production Research Co., Box 2189, Houston TX 77252-2189, USA
3 Exxon Company USA, Box 2180, Houston TX 77252-2180, USA

Detailed sequence stratigraphy of several neighbouring fields in the East Shetland basin indicates that a higher order of cyclicity is superimposed onto the lower Brent Group. Both relative falls and rises in sea-level affected the strongly progradational nearshore/barrier-island system and induced important variations in the geometry, distribution and stacking patterns of the reservoir facies. The majority of the shallow marine strata belong to the transgressive and highstand systems tract and consist of the lower-shoreface Rannoch, the upper shoreface and strand-plain Etive and the back-barrier and lagoonal Lower Ness. High frequency increments of shoreline progradation are preserved in the Rannoch as gently seaward-dipping bedsets. The small-scale units mark asymmetric cycles in grain size and mica content and together, with stratiform cement, impart a strong permeability anisotropy on the Rannoch. The nearshore Etive Formation represents a sediment-laden, barred nearshore complex and is subdivided into (1) a uniformly thick upper shoreface and (2) an overlying emergent strand plain. The two subfacies are commonly separated by a thin interval of foreshore which is locally enriched in heavy minerals. The shoreface deposits show systematic variations in stacking geometries ranging from strongly progradational to aggradational.

Two relative falls in sea-level led to the subaerial erosion of nearshore Etive deposits and the juxtaposition of coastal-plain mudstones, coals and fluvial deposits with shale-clast lags on lower shoreface Rannoch strata. Although lithostratigraphically part of the Etive, these deposits bear no resemblance to the well ordered nearshore-Etive deposits. The channel complexes are vertically and laterally heterogeneous and are confined to incised valleys separated by non-depositional interfluves. In Cormorant and Tern fields, well-performance anomalies such as early water breakthrough and unpredictable water injection and oil production rates are associated with these lowstand incised valley deposits. An enigmatic coarse-grained unit occurs in the lower Rannoch in Eider field and is provisionally interpreted as the distal expression of the lowstand shoreface deposits associated with the older incised valley. Following the lowstand deposition nearshore-marine sedimentation reestablished during the transgressive/early highstand systems tract. Under the influence of rising relative sea-level the barrier complex aggraded in place with minimal landward translation of the shoreline position. The volume of sediment supplied to the Etive shoreface was sufficiently high to keep pace with phases of increased accommodation. The shoreline system subsequently stacked with a strongly progradational geometry as the high sediment supply filled the available accommodation space during the latter part of the highstand systems tract.