Provenance of organic matter in an intracratonic rift basin: insights from biomarker distribution in Palaeogene crude oils of Cambay Basin, western India

2021 ◽  
pp. 104329
Author(s):  
Sumit Kumar ◽  
Suryendu Dutta ◽  
Uttam K. Bhui
2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 398-415
Author(s):  
He Bi ◽  
Peng Li ◽  
Yun Jiang ◽  
Jing-Jing Fan ◽  
Xiao-Yue Chen

AbstractThis study considers the Upper Cretaceous Qingshankou Formation, Yaojia Formation, and the first member of the Nenjiang Formation in the Western Slope of the northern Songliao Basin. Dark mudstone with high abundances of organic matter of Gulong and Qijia sags are considered to be significant source rocks in the study area. To evaluate their development characteristics, differences and effectiveness, geochemical parameters are analyzed. One-dimensional basin modeling and hydrocarbon evolution are also applied to discuss the effectiveness of source rocks. Through the biomarker characteristics, the source–source, oil–oil, and oil–source correlations are assessed and the sources of crude oils in different rock units are determined. Based on the results, Gulong and Qijia source rocks have different organic matter primarily detrived from mixed sources and plankton, respectively. Gulong source rock has higher thermal evolution degree than Qijia source rock. The biomarker parameters of the source rocks are compared with 31 crude oil samples. The studied crude oils can be divided into two groups. The oil–source correlations show that group I oils from Qing II–III, Yao I, and Yao II–III members were probably derived from Gulong source rock and that only group II oils from Nen I member were derived from Qijia source rock.


Facies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Franz T. Fürsich ◽  
Matthias Alberti ◽  
Dhirendra K. Pandey

AbstractThe siliciclastic Jhuran Formation of the Kachchh Basin, a rift basin bordering the Malagasy Seaway, documents the filling of the basin during the late syn-rift stage. The marine, more than 700-m-thick Tithonian part of the succession in the western part of the basin is composed of highly asymmetric transgressive–regressive cycles and is nearly unfossiliferous except for two intervals, the Lower Tithonian Hildoglochiceras Bed (HB) and the upper Lower Tithonian to lowermost Cretaceous Green Ammonite Beds (GAB). Both horizons represent maximum flooding zones (MFZ) and contain a rich fauna composed of ammonites and benthic macroinvertebrates. Within the HB the benthic assemblages change, concomitant with an increase in the carbonate content, from the predominantly infaunal “Lucina” rotundata to the epifaunal Actinostreon marshii and finally to the partly epifaunal, partly infaunal Eoseebachia sowerbyana assemblage. The Green Ammonite Beds are composed of three highly ferruginous beds, which are the MFZ of transgressive–regressive cycles forming the MFZ of a 3rd-order depositional sequence. The GAB are highly ferruginous, containing berthieroid ooids and grains. GAB I is characterized by the reworked Gryphaea moondanensis assemblage, GAB II by an autochthonous high-diversity assemblage dominated by the brachiopods Acanthorhynchia multistriata and Somalithyris lakhaparensis, whereas GAB III is devoid of fossils except for scarce ammonites. The GAB are interpreted to occupy different positions along an onshore–offshore transect with increasing condensation offshore. Integrated analyses of sedimentological, taphonomic, and palaeoecological data allow to reconstruct, in detail, the sequence stratigraphic architecture of sedimentary successions and to evaluate their degree of faunal condensation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 109 (6) ◽  
pp. 2240-2251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pallabee Choudhury ◽  
Sumer Chopra ◽  
Charu Kamra ◽  
Archana Das

Abstract The intraplate Gujarat region located at the trijunction of three failed rifts, Kachchh, Narmada, and Cambay, is one of the most seismically active intraplate regions of the world. Among these three, the Cambay basin has been investigated thoroughly for petroleum. However, the basin has not been studied from a seismotectonic perspective. For the past few years, the northern part of the Cambay basin is becoming active with reasonably frequent earthquake occurrences. In the past 10 yr, ∼995 earthquakes have been recorded from the region with a maximum magnitude up to 4.2. Most of the earthquakes are in the magnitude range 1–3. Since 2009, four Global Positioning System (GPS) stations have been in operation in the vicinity of the Cambay basin, and a maximum deformation of 1.8±0.1  mm/yr has been estimated. The GPS‐derived strain rates of ∼0.02–0.03  microstrain/yr are prevalent in the region. An average strain rate of 0.02  microstrain/yr in the region can generate an earthquake of magnitude 6.4. The focal mechanisms of the earthquakes have been mostly normal with strike‐slip component and corroborated by the geodetic strain tensors. Most of the seismicity is clustered in the basement ridges, striking along pre‐existing Precambrian trends that cross the Cambay basin. Complex geodynamics have developed around the northern part of the Cambay rift because of the various movements along several faults, presence of basement ridges, and subsurface plutonic bodies in a failed rift, which are creating stresses and causing earthquakes in this part of the rift. We postulated that the highly heterogeneous subsurface structure beneath the northern part of the Cambay rift is creating additional stress, which is superimposing on the regional stress field substantially, and this mechanism is plausibly facilitating the localized extensional tectonics in the region where compression is expected.


1972 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 125
Author(s):  
T.G. Powell ◽  
D.M. McKirdy

Australian oils are generally light by world standards. They have API gravities greater than 35°, low sulphur and asphalt contents, and are of paraffinic or naphthenic base. The geochemical similarity of oils from the Bowen-Surat Basin, with the notable exception of the Conloi crude, is most marked in the fraction boiling above 250 °C. Oils from the Cooper, Gippsland and Otway Basins are probably derived from terrestrial organic material, but differ in their degree of maturation as indicated by n-alkane patterns. Samples from the Perth Basin exhibit a similar variation in maturity. In the Carnarvon Basin, the Windalia crude differs from those in deeper reservoirs in containing a higher proportion of oxygen-bearing, nitrogen-bearing, and sulphur-bearing compounds, another sign of a less mature oil. The East Mereenie oil displays an odd-even predominance in its n-alkane distribution which is characteristic of some Lower Palaeozoic crudes. A Papuan Basin condensate is the only available sample produced from a limestone reservoir. This probably accounts for its higher sulphur content. Two seeps obtained from the Papuan Highlands are inspissated residues which may have suffered microbiological alteration.A major control of the composition of Australian crude oils appears to be the depositional environment of the source rock. Most of the oils show evidence of having been generated, at least in part, from terrestrial (as opposed to marine) organic matter. The location of all but one of the reservoirs within sequences dominated by the sandstone - shale association is consistent with the likely contribution of land plant detritus to their source environment. Likewise, low sulphur and asphalt values reflect the scarcity of favourable carbonate-evaporite source and reservoir situations in Australia.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vijayananda Sarangi ◽  
Sayak Basu ◽  
Prasanta Sanyal

<p>Biomass burning is an important component of major biomes as it acts as an ecological forcing factor in controlling the vegetation composition as well as biomass production. Thus long-term paleo-fire records are required to understand the extent to which future fire regimes will affect ecosystem health and the global carbon balance. Unfortunately, paleo-fire proxies such as charcoal analysis, dendrochronology and archaeological relicts are often fragmented and difficult to interpret owing to their poor preservation in the natural archives. To resolve the uncertainties associated with the existing paleo-fire proxies, biomarker-based investigations (n-alkanes) provide a new avenue for gaining insight into the paleo-fire events due to their relatively stable chemical property and source-specific distribution in sediments. For instance, laboratory and field-based experiments have shown that a significant amount of short-chain n-alkanes (predominantly C<sub>18</sub>) are produced at the expense of long-chain n-alkanes during thermal degradation of plant-derived organic matter. This modification of primary carbon chain-length can thus be used as a tool to decipher paleo-fire events. However, this characteristic distribution pattern of n-alkane in the soil can also result from microbial degradation of plant-derived organic matter. Therefore, it is vital to disentangle the effect of thermal and microbial degradation on the distribution pattern of n-alkane before using it for paleo-fire reconstructions. For this purpose, published n-alkane distribution records from two distinct climatic settings have been compared. The site-A is located in arid Banni grassland, western India (with a history of repeated fire events) whereas, site-B is situated at the sub-humid region of southern peninsular India (Lake Ennamangalam). The n-alkane distribution in both the sites exhibits a dominance of short-chain homologues with prominent even-over-odd preference (EOP). The cross-plot between the relative concentration of C<sub>18</sub> (dominant in short-chain) and C<sub>29</sub> (dominant in long-chain) homologues shows positive and significant correlation (R<sup>2</sup> = 0.9, p < 0.05, n=19) at site-A, whereas statistically insignificant correlation (R<sup>2</sup> = 0.2, p < 0.05, n=19) has been obtained from site-B. In case of thermal events, production of short-chain n-alkanes (predominantly C<sub>18</sub>) is related to the temperature-dependent breakdown of long-chain n-alkanes. Subsequently, the concentration of C<sub>18</sub> and C<sub>29</sub> homologues are expected to be well correlated, as observed in site-A. On the contrary, in a depositional setting dominated by microbial activity, multiple sources of C<sub>18</sub> homologue may produce an insignificant correlation, as observed from site-B. Therefore, it can be suggested that short-chain n-alkanes at site-A are a product of thermal degradation while microbial activity controlled the distribution of short-chain n-alkanes at site-B. This claim is further supported by the ratio between the relative concentration of C<sub>18</sub> and C<sub>19</sub> homologues (P<sub>Factor</sub>) which are much higher at site-A (11 to 62) compared to that of the site-B (1 to 10). Higher production of C<sub>18</sub> homologue during thermal degradation perhaps is producing the offset in the P<sub>Factor</sub> values for site-A and B. Our observations will be useful to recognise paleo-fire events that have been previously overlooked owing to the fragmentary nature and limited preservation of existing proxies.</p>


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