Charging of oil fields surrounding the Shaleitian uplift from multiple source rock intervals and generative kitchens,Bohai Bay basin,China |
| |
Authors: | Fang Hao Xinhuai Zhou Yangming Zhu Huayao Zou Yuanyuan Yang |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. State Key Laboratory of Petroleum Resources and Prospecting, China University of Petroleum, Changping, Beijing 102249, China;2. Tianjin Branch of China National Offshore Oil Company Ltd, Tianjin 300452, China;3. Department of Earth Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang 310027, China |
| |
Abstract: | This paper discusses origin and charging directions of oil fields on the Shaleitian Uplift, Bohai Bay basin. The Shaleitian Uplift is a footwall uplift surrounded by three sags containing mature source rocks. The origins of the four oil fields on the Shaleitian Uplift, both in terms of source rock intervals and in terms of generative kitchens, were studied using biomarker distributions for 61 source rock samples and 27 oil samples. Hierarchical cluster analysis using 12 parameters known to be effective indicators of organic matter input and/or depositional conditions allowed the identification of six oil types or classes. These six oil classes could then be linked to three distinct source rock intervals ranging in age from 43.0 Ma to 30.3 Ma. The third member (43.0–38.0 Ma in age) and first member (35.8–32.8 Ma) of the Eocene Shahejie Formation, and the third member of the Oligocene Dongying Formation (32.8–30.3 Ma) each sourced one class of oil. The other three classes represent mixtures of oil generated from multiple source rock intervals. Traps on the Shaleitian Uplift were charged in the east by oil generated from the Eocene Shahejie Formation in the Bozhong Sag, in the southeast by oil generated from the Eocene Shahejie and then Oligocene Dongying formations in the southwestern part of the Bozhong Sag and/or in the eastern part of the Shanan Sag, and in the southwest by oil generated from the Eocene Shahejie Formation in the western part of the Shanan Sag. The estimated migration distances range from less than 5 km to about 20 km. The compositional heterogeneity within fields and multiple-parameter comparisons between oils from nearby wells in different fields have proven to be a powerful tool to determine the in-filling histories of oil fields in cases where multiple source rock intervals and multiple generative kitchens exist. |
| |
Keywords: | Lacustrine source rocks Biomarker assemblage Oil classes Compositional heterogeneity Migration tracing Charging directions Bohai Bay basin |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|