Implications of Stratigraphic Variability in Petroleum Source Rocks from the Potiguar Basin, Brazil, for Oil/Source Correlation and Migration Effects

AAPG Bulletin ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 76 ◽  
Author(s):  
TRINDADE, L. A .F., Stanford Univer
Geofluids ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ming Wu ◽  
Jun Jin ◽  
Wanyun Ma ◽  
Baoli Xiang ◽  
Ni Zhou ◽  
...  

Whether there is an effective deep-buried lacustrine Triassic petroleum system in the Junggar Basin, NW China, has been enigmatic and debated for a long time. Here we conduct an oil-source correlation to address this issue. Results show that the extracted bitumens from the Triassic mudstones in the central basin have distinctive stable carbon isotope and biomarker compositions compared to the Permian-sourced and Jurassic-sourced hydrocarbons, the other two recognized sources in the study area. These characteristics include δ13C value of -30.46~-26.30‰, β-carotane/maximum n-alkane of 0.22–0.41, Pr/Ph of 1.00–1.51, C24 tetracyclic terpane/C26 tricyclic terpane of 0.43–0.96, Ts/Tm of 0.34–0.64, gammacerane/C30 hopane of 0.10–0.14, and regular steranes C27 > C28 < C29 with C29 sterane in dominance (40–50%). These suggest that the Triassic mudstones in the study area host fresh lacustrine organic matters with high input of higher plants. The Triassic-reservoired crude oils and extracts can be divided into two types. Through oil-source correlation, we infer that both type A and type B oils are derived from mixed Permian and Triassic source rocks. Linear regression analysis shows that the contribution from Triassic mudstones to type A and B oils is 67% and 31%, respectively. This implies that the deep-buried Triassic lacustrine mudstones in the Junggar Basin may have some oil-generation potential and thus might represent a new case of Triassic petroleum systems in China and deserves a more detailed and thorough study in future exploration and exploitation.


2016 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 189-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junwen Peng ◽  
Xiongqi Pang ◽  
Shuang Xiao ◽  
Huijie Peng ◽  
Qianwen Li ◽  
...  

The process and mechanisms of secondary hydrocarbon migration in the Huixi half-graben, Pearl River Mouth Basin, were investigated on the basis of geological analysis of the strata and study of the porosity and permeability of the reservoir rocks, fluid potential, oil properties, and geochemistry of oil–source correlation. The results suggest that the hydrocarbons of the Zhujiang Formation in the Huixi half-graben were derived from source rocks of the Eocene Wenchang Formation and the Eocene–Oligocene Enping Formation in the Huizhou Sag. The hydrocarbons migrated laterally from northeast to southwest. The sandstone in the upper member of the Zhujiang Formation exhibited superior physical properties (porosity and permeability) and connectivity than the lower member. Thin sandstone beds with good physical properties and stable distribution in the upper member of the Zhujiang Formation were the main carrier beds for lateral hydrocarbon migration.


1999 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 399
Author(s):  
B.G.K. van Aarssen ◽  
T.P. Bastow ◽  
R ◽  
Alexander ◽  
R.I. Kagi

Variations in higher-plant-derived biomarkers in sedimentary sequences reflect changes in the palaeoclimatic conditions at the time of deposition. It is thought that changes in climate affect the distribution of higher plant populations growing on the hinterland, thus changing the contribution of these plants into the sediments. These variations can be measured using the abundances of three aromatic hydrocarbons: retene, cadalene and iP-iHMN. This was done for a Jurassic sedimentary sequence from the Koolinda–1 well in the Barrow Sub-basin, The obtained profile was related to an absolute time-scale. Measurement of the higher-plant-derived biomarkers in crude oils from the Barrow Sub-basin enabled accurate measurement of the age of their source rocks by using the Koolinda–1 profile as a reference. Most of these oils correlate with the Jurassic W. spectabilis dinoflagellate zone in the Oxfordian. Within this zone the oils fall into four age groups, reflecting four oil-prone intervals each separated by approximately 0.2 My. The oils that have been generated from each group can be found in specific reservoirs in the sub-basin, showing a pattern of migration away from the depocentre with decreasing age of the source rock. This method of determining the source rock age of crude oils enables detailed oil-source rock correlations. On a basin-wide scale it can provide insight into the location of major source rocks and migration pathways.


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