Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5161381 | Organic Geochemistry | 2017 | 80 Pages |
Abstract
Results show that all solid bitumen samples in the MG Bulge exhibit similar compositions of molecular markers, thereby implying that they belong to the same oil population and that paleo-oils should be derived from the same source kitchen/bed. Low pristane/phytane and dibenzothiophene (DBT)/phenanthrene ratios, as well as the predominance of DBT among DBT, dibenzofuran, and fluorene, are observed in the solid bitumen samples, which suggest that related paleo-oil reservoirs likely originated from a highly reducing marine shale environment. All isopleth maps of the DBT concentrations, 4-methylDBT/1-methylDBT, 4,6-dimethylDBT/(1,4Â +Â 1,6)-dimethylDBT (DMDBT), and (2,6Â +Â 3,6)-DMDBT/(1,4Â +Â 1,6)-DMDBT ratios consistently indicate that the overall orientation of oil migration in the MG Bulge is primarily from the west-to-east direction, with the strongest filling point located at approximately the Mx12 well. The north-to-west direction is an additional filling orientation. These indicators show that those paleo-oils that had been cracked to pyrobitumens mainly originated from a source kitchen in the western part of the MG Bulge. A hydrocarbon source kitchen in the northern part of the MG Bulge may also have developed but further research on this is needed. The recognition of these solid bitumen molecular signatures, particularly the consistent results using DBT concentrations and alkyl DBT thermal maturity indicators, suggests a potential approach that can be applied to the study of paleo-oil reservoirs.
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Authors
Zhonghong Chen, Yueming Yang, T.-G. Wang, Bin Cheng, Meijun Li, Bing Luo, Yong Chen, Zhiyong Ni, Chengyu Yang, Tong Chen, Ronghui Fang, Miao Wang,