PSGiant
Palaeo Oilfields in the Silurian Sandstone, Tarim Basin, China: Evidence from
Bitumen,
Quantitative
Fluorescence and Fluid Inclusions
By
Keyu Liu1, Xiongqi Pang2, Zhenxue Jiang2, Jun Zhang4, and Stephen Fenton1
Search and Discovery Article #20037 (2006)
Posted August 10, 2006
*Poster presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, April 9-12, 2006.
Click to view
posters in PDF format.
Poster 1 (1.2 mb) Poster 2 (1.3 mb)
1CSIRO Petroleum, Bentley, WA, Australia ([email protected])
2China University of Petroleum, Beijing, China
3RIPED, SINOPEC, China
Abstract
Over 25,000 square
kilometres of bitumen-bearing reservoir sandstones have been mapped out in the
Silurian stratigraphic succession in the Tarim Basin, western China. An
integrated investigation of the bitumen-bearing sandstones from 22 exploration
and production wells using fluid inclusion
analysis
,
Quantitative
Grain
Fluorescence (QGF) and QGF on extracts (QGF-E) and Total Scanning Fluorescence (TSF)
techniques have delineated the spatial distribution of the one-time giant palaeo
oilfields. The palaeo oilfields consist of two basin-wide major reservoir units
of several metres to tens of metres on average separated by an intraformational
capillary barrier, the “red-bed” shale, and in places the palaeo oil columns may
attain up to 70 m high. The fluid inclusion results and the
quantitative
fluorescence fingerprints of the inclusion oils also indicate the presence of
oils from multiple sources in the study area and possible from multiple charge
events.
An initial estimate for the area investigated suggests that the one-time palaeo reserve amounts to over 13 billion tons of liquid hydrocarbons equivalent. The destruction of the giant palaeo oilfields is thought to be primarily due to tectonic movement after the emplacement of the hydrocarbons. Biodegradation of the oil in relatively shallow depths has been suggested to be the major mechanism for the development of the widespread bitumen.
Selected Figures