Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
11033088 | Marine and Petroleum Geology | 2018 | 62 Pages |
Abstract
We conducted a chemical and isotopic study of oilfield waters from Ordovician limestone reservoirs in the Tazhong oilfield (Tarim Basin, China) to trace the origin and evolution of the waters, and to demonstrate their possible relationship with hydrocarbon charging. The elemental chemistry (Cl, Br, SO4, I, K, Na, Ca, Mg, and Sr) and multiple isotopic compositions (δD, δ18O, 87Sr/86Sr, and 129I/I) of the oilfield waters were determined. The results show that these oilfield waters contain basinal brines that infiltrated in three stages, along with a lesser contribution from meteoric water. The meteoric water appears to have infiltrated downwards during the late Silurian and Carboniferous. The earliest brine had very low I contents (<5.65â¯mg/L) and migrated upwards from organic-poor Cambrian to Lower Ordovician dolostones during the Late Ordovician. The second brine had high I contents (>50â¯mg/L), was derived from Cambrian argillaceous source rocks, and migrated upwards into Ordovician reservoirs. This stage was related to the main period of migration of crude oils out of the source rocks into reservoirs during the Silurian and Devonian. Both of these brines incorporated constant levels of fissiogenic 129I from the limestone reservoir rocks (11.8-47.0 atom/μL). Finally, brine with very low I contents, but higher 129I (106-491 atom/μL), began to migrate upwards and infiltrate reservoirs. Given the relatively high fissiogenic 129I, this stage may have occurred during the late Cenozoic, and was associated with migration of dry gas from the same source rocks. Our results, combined with those of a previous study of other oilfields in the basin, suggest that the evolutionary of oilfield waters can be used to constrain hydrocarbon accumulation events, and both of which were ultimately controlled by regional tectonism and local geological factors.
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Authors
Jian Chen, Dayong Liu, Xiaolin Hou, Yukun Fan, Wanglu Jia, Ping'an Peng, Baoshou Zhang, Zhongyao Xiao,