Practical Kerogen Typing for Petroleum Exploration
Brian Horsfield, Stephen R. Larter
The explorationist requires basic quantitative information on the size,
gas-oil ratio (GOR), and timing of petroleum charges. Yet only a part of this
crucial information is obtainable from the data currently used to define kerogen
types. We describe here a practical approach and solution to this problem by
defining kerogen type according to three fundamental criteria. One of these is
total hydrocarbon-generating potential, as determined by Rock-Eval pyrolysis
(S2). The other equally important criteria are source quality (GOR, wax content,
etc), as determined by pyrolysis-gas chromatography (PY-GC), and
thermal
lability (response to
thermal
stress), as determined by PY-GC and microscale
simulation pyrolysis techniques. With regard to source quality determination,
paraffini oil-generating potential (both high wax and low wax),
paraffinic-naphthenic-aromatic oil-generating potential (both high wax and low
wax), and gas condensate-generating potentials are readily discernible and
quantifiable. Concerning
thermal
lability, the influence of extreme
maturation
levels on source rock and petroleum composition has been assessed. In the case
of some kerogens, bulk compositional features can be preserved to high levels of
thermal
stress. This means that original oil-generating potential can sometimes
be discerned from the analysis of overmature kerogens.
The improved resolution of kerogen types described here offers the petroleum
geoscientist the potential for constructing more exact organic facies models and
for selecting the most appropriate calibration standards for
maturation
models.
In addition, the measurement of primary GOR values for petroleum charges allows
us to model more effectively the volumetric behavior of petroleum during
secondary migration. Examples and case histories are presented on Tertiary
nonmarine source rocks from Indonesia and the United States, lower Paleozoic
source rocks from the United States and Scandinavia, and Mesozoic marine source
rocks from northwestern Europe.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91022©1989 AAPG Annual Convention, April 23-26, 1989, San Antonio, Texas.