Depositional model and diagenetic evolution of hydrocarbon reservoirs in deep dolomites of the Ordos Basin, China

2022 ◽  
pp. 69-89
Author(s):  
Zhongtang Su ◽  
Anqing Chen ◽  
A.J. (Tom) van Loon ◽  
Shuai Yang ◽  
Chenggong Zhang ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 850-871 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anqing Chen ◽  
Shenglin Xu ◽  
Shuai Yang ◽  
Hongde Chen ◽  
Zhongtang Su ◽  
...  

Recent natural gas discoveries indicate that non-karstification-dominated reservoirs exist in the intracratonic Ordos Basin. This study examines the sedimentological and geochemical characteristics needed to clarify the depositional model and diagenetic evolution process of this newly discovered reservoir type. The depositional environment of the dolomite reservoir can be characterized as a tidal flat that grew from the Central Paleo-uplift to the eastern depression by cyclic progradation on an epeiric platform. A tidal flat sequence can extend laterally as a progradational wedge in each cycle of sea level fluctuation. The sheet-shaped peritidal shoal facies associations patched on the wedge represent potential dolomite reservoirs and can be recognized by the presence of doloarenite that has been altered into a vaguely relict grained-texture by diagenesis. Although continuing destructive diagenesis has led to reservoir densification, burial dolomitization and burial dissolution with facies selectivity have tended to occur in peritidal shoal facies associations, thus improving the quality of the dolomite reservoirs. These models provide new insights for targeting deep dolomite hydrocarbon reservoirs in intracratonic basins.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fengyang Xiong ◽  
◽  
Zhenxue Jiang ◽  
Mohammad Amin Amooie ◽  
Mohamad Reza Soltanian ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei-Fu Zhang ◽  
Da-Zhong Dong
Keyword(s):  

An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via the original article.


1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (10) ◽  
pp. 2128-2138 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald B. Brinkman ◽  
Jiang-Hua Peng

Ordosemys leios, n.gen., n.sp., from the Early Cretaceous Luohandong Formation, Zhidan Group, Ordos Basin, Inner Mongolia, is a primitive aquatic turtle with a reduced, fenestrated plastron. It shares with the members of the Centrocryptodira the presence of well-formed articular surfaces on the cervical and caudal vertebrae. Within the Centrocryptodira, characters of the cervical vertebrae suggest it is more closely related to the Polycryptodira than is the Meiolaniidae. Ordosemys shares with the Chelydridae the presence of two procoelous anterior caudals, but this character may be primitive for the Polycryptodira. Characters of the basicranial region of the braincase shared by Ordosemys and the Chelonioidea support a sister-group relationship between these two taxa, but a sister-group relationship between Ordosemys and the Polycryptodira is more strongly supported by characters shared by the Chelonioidea and other members of the Polycryptodira.


2018 ◽  
Vol 37 (6) ◽  
pp. 1680-1693
Author(s):  
Junyan Wang ◽  
Lin Xiao ◽  
Ping Li ◽  
SI Arbuzov ◽  
Shuli Ding

2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (12) ◽  
pp. 1228-1247
Author(s):  
Zhengjian Xu ◽  
Luofu Liu ◽  
Tieguan Wang ◽  
Kangjun Wu ◽  
Wenchao Dou ◽  
...  

With the success of Bakken tight oil (tight sandstone oil and shale oil) and Eagle Ford tight oil in North America, tight oil has become a research focus in petroleum geology. In China, tight oil reservoirs are predominantly distributed in lacustrine basins. The Triassic Chang 6 Member is the main production layer of tight oil in the Ordos Basin, in which the episodes, timing, and drive of tight oil charging have been analyzed through the petrography, fluorescence microspectrometry, microthermometry, and trapping pressure simulations of fluid inclusions in the reservoir beds. Several conclusions have been reached in this paper. First, aqueous inclusions with five peaks of homogenization temperatures and oil inclusions with three peaks of homogenization temperatures occurred in the Chang 6 reservoir beds. The oil inclusions are mostly distributed in fractures that cut across and occur within the quartz grains, in the quartz overgrowth and calcite cements, and the fractures that occur within the feldspar grains, with blue–green, green, and yellow–green fluorescence colours. Second, the peak wavelength, Q650/500, and QF535 of the fluorescence microspectrometry indicate three charging episodes of tight oil with different oil maturities. The charging timings (141–136, 126–118, and 112–103 Ma) have been ascertained by projecting the homogenization temperatures of aqueous inclusions onto the geological time axis. Third, excess-pressure differences up to 10 MPa between the Chang 7 source rocks and the Chang 6 reservoir beds were the main driving mechanism supporting the process of nonbuoyancy migration.


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