Abstract: Organic Facies and Geochemistry
of Petroleum
Source
Rocks in a Middle Cretaceous Transition-Drift Sequence
in Northern Gabon
Kuo, Lung-Chuan - Conoco Inc.
An Aptian-Albian transgressive sequence
deposited during a transition from continental rifting to drifting in northern
Gabon contains petroleum
source
rocks with large variations in organic
richness and quality. The TOC content (0.04-10.71 wt.%), hydrogen index
(86-691 mgHC/gTOC), and
Rock
-Eval S1+S2 (0.08-73.91 mgHC/gRock) of 224
samples from 8 wells all exhibit log-normal distribution. In the Dentale
and Gamba Formations (fluvial-deltaic), shales deposited in swampy lakes
usually have high TOC content, contain algal organic matter, and have potential
of generating waxy and non-waxy oils, whereas those deposited in abandoned
channels, oxbow lakes, crevasse splays, levees, point bars and floodplains
have lower TOC content and hydrogen index, contain larger amount of woody
organic matter, and have mixed potential of oil and gas generation. The
Vembo shales (lagoonal) contain bacterial and terrigenous organic matter
and vary from oil-prone to gas-prone. The Ezanga Salt (evaporitic) has
no hydrocarbon
source
potential. The Namina shales (shallow marine) contain
mainly marine algal organic matter and are prone to generating non-waxy
oils. The organic facies variation from deltaic, fluvial, shallow marine,
to lagoonal are clearly defined by a systematic increase in gammacerane
index and decrease in pristane/phytane ratio (Fig. 1) which reflect an
increase in water salinity and decrease in the redox potential of the
source
sediments.
The north-south trending Atlantic Flexure divides
two major petroleum systems in northern Gabon. Oils in the pre-salt system
to the
east
are generated mainly from the Melania and Kissenda (freshwater
lacustrine)
source
rocks, and those in the post-salt system to the west
are generated from the Azile-Anguille and Namina (marine)
source
rocks.
Basin modeling suggests that the separation of these two systems is controlled
by the maturation history of the basin and the presence of the Ezanga salt.
In the Ogooué Delta area, the distribution of Azile-Anguille-sourced
and Namina-sourced oils appears to be related to the migration of the depocenters
during the evolution of the delta. From the Ogooué Delta to the
Atlantic Flexure, the Azile-Anguille
source
rocks are early mature, whereas
the pre-salt oils and gases are trapped below the Ezanga salt, thus the
Namina shale is likely the major
source
of oils. Between the Atlantic Flexure
and the Lambarene Horst, the Ezanga salt prohibits oil and gas migration
from the pre-salt
source
rocks to the post-salt reservoirs. In the Interior
Basin, oil generation and expulsion is limited only to the deepest portion
of the Kissenda
source
rock
. To the north of the Interior Basin, oil generation
from the pre-salt
source
rocks predated seal development and the post-salt
source
rocks are immature (Fig. 2).
The exploration results to date suggest that the
post-salt petroleum systems off shore northern Gabon have good potential
for future oil and gas discoveries. Basin modeling will be useful for studying
the timing and phase of hydrocarbon generation and migration from the Namina
and Azile-Anguille
source
rocks and its relation to reservoir and seal
development.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90933©1998 ABGP/AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil