Characterizing Fluid Inclusion Oils via UV Fluorescence Microspectrophotometry--A Method for Projecting Oil Quality and Constraining Oil Migration History: ABSTRACT

AAPG Bulletin ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 74 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. F. Tsui
2000 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 133 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Lisk ◽  
J. Ostby ◽  
N.J. Russell ◽  
G.W. O’Brien

The dual issues of the presence or absence of a viable, oil-prone petroleum system and reservoir quality represent key exploration uncertainties in the lightly explored Offshore Canning Basin, North West Shelf. To better quantify these factors, a detailed fluid inclusion investigation of potential reservoir horizons within the basin has been undertaken. The results have been integrated with regional petroleum geology and Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) oil seep data to better understand the oil migration risk in the region.The fluid inclusion data provide confirmation of widespread oil migration at multiple Mesozoic and Palaeozoic levels, including those wells that are remote from the likely source kitchens. The lack of evidence for present or palaeo-oil accumulations is consistent with the proposition that none of the currently water-wet wells appear to have tested a valid structure. These observations, when combined with the presence of numerous direct hydrocarbon indicators on seismic data and a number of oil slicks (from SAR data) at the basin’s edge, suggest that the potential for oil charge to valid structures is much higher than previously recognised.Petrographic analysis of the tight, gas-bearing, Triassic sandstones in Phoenix–1 suggests that the low porosity and permeability is the result of late poikilotopic carbonate cement. Significantly, the presence of oil inclusions within quartz overgrowths that pre-date the carbonate indicates that oil migration began prior to crystallisation of carbonate. Fluid inclusion palaeotemperatures combined with a 1D basin model suggest that trapping of oil as inclusions occurred in the Early to Middle Cretaceous and that predictions of reservoir quality using available water-wet wells could seriously under-estimate porositypermeability levels in potential traps that were charged with oil at about 100 Ma. Indeed, acid leaching of core plugs from Phoenix–1 indicates that removal of diagenetic carbonate results in significant permeability increase with obvious implications for the producibility of any future oil discovery. Further, evidence of Early Cretaceous oil charge has implications for the size and locality of source kitchens compared to that observed at the current day.Collectively, the data indicate the area has received widespread oil migration and suggest future exploration, even to relatively deep levels, may be successful if valid traps can be delineated.


Author(s):  
Ao Su ◽  
Honghan Chen ◽  
Yue-xing Feng ◽  
Jian-xin Zhao

To date, few isotope age constraints on primary oil migration have been reported. Here we present U-Pb dating and characterization of two fracture-filling, oil inclusion-bearing calcite veins hosted in the Paleocene siliciclastic mudstone source rocks in Subei Basin, China. Deposition age of the mudstone formation was estimated to be ca. 60.2−58.0 Ma. The first vein consists of two major phases: a microcrystalline-granular (MG) calcite phase, and a blocky calcite phase, each showing distinctive petrographic features, rare earth element patterns, and carbon and oxygen isotope compositions. The early MG phase resulted from local mobilization of host carbonates, likely associated with disequilibrium compaction over-pressuring or tectonic extension, whereas the late-filling blocky calcite phase was derived from overpressured oil-bearing fluids with enhanced fluid-rock interactions. Vein texture and fluorescence characteristics reveal at least two oil expulsion events, the former represented by multiple bitumen veinlets postdating the MG calcite generation, and the latter marked by blue-fluorescing primary oil inclusions synchronous with the blocky calcite cementation. The MG calcite yields a laser ablation−inductively coupled plasma−mass spectrometry U-Pb age of 55.6 ± 1.4 Ma, constraining the earliest timing of the early oil migration event. The blocky calcite gives a younger U-Pb age of 47.8 ± 2.3 Ma, analytically indistinguishable from the U-Pb age of 46.5 ± 1.7 Ma yielded by the second calcite vein. These two ages define the time of the late oil migration event, agreeing well with the age estimate of 49.7−45.2 Ma inferred from fluid-inclusion homogenization temperature and published burial models. Thermodynamic modeling shows that the oil inclusions were trapped at ∼27.0−40.9 MPa, exceeding corresponding hydrostatic pressures (23.1−26.7 MPa), confirming mild-moderate overpressure created by oil generation-expulsion. This integrated study combining carbonate U-Pb dating and fluid-inclusion characterization provides a new approach for reconstructing pressure-temperature-composition-time points in petroleum systems.


1991 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 282 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.J. Eadington ◽  
P.J. Hamilton ◽  
G.P. Bai

Fluid history analysis investigates oil migration and basin hydrology which are important factors affecting hydrocarbon charge to reservoirs. A combination of direct observation and measurement at the mineralogical scale and numerical simulations is used.Fluid inclusions in diagenetic minerals are used to make direct observations about the timing of oil migration and to measure palaeotemperatures. Isotopic compositions of diagenetic minerals are measured for age determination and to identify the sources of ancient pore waters in order to interpret basin hydrology.Integrated interpretation of time specific and time dependent thermal indicators provides a detailed thermal history of the rocks as input to numerical simulations of oil generation. Hydrocarbon fluid inclusions provide an observational check on the theoretical predictions.In the Eromanga Basin in south-west Queensland two areas with different oil migration history are identified. On the Jackson-Challum trend there was a pulse of oil migration synchronous with quartz cementation in late Cretaceous time. On the Tintaburra-Bodalla South trend oil migration followed quartz cementation from the mid Cretaceous to the present day. Jackson oil migrated while the isotopic composition of pore water became increasingly oxygen-18 enriched indicating diagenetic modification during slow flow of groundwater. Tintaburra oil migration occurred during the present regime of downdip flow of relatively oxygen-18 depleted groundwater characteristic of a meteoric origin.


2001 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 287-306 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Rossi ◽  
R.H. Goldstein ◽  
R. Marfil ◽  
R. Salas ◽  
M.I. Benito ◽  
...  

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