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Hydrocarbon Occurrence Models Controlled by Graded Multi-factor in Marine Reservoirs, South China*
By
Sihuang Xu1, Yongsheng Ma2, Lianfu Mei3, Caiping Yuan3, and Tonglou Guo2
Search and Discovery Article #10118 (2006)
Posted November 20, 2006
*Adapted from extended abstract prepared for presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, April 9-12, 2006.
1China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, China, presently Kansas Geological Survey, Lawrence , KS
2South China Subsidiary of SINOPEC, Kunming, China
3China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, China
According to
the concept of
petroleum
system
, if a hydrocarbon pool is to exist, the
geological elements including a
petroleum
source rock, reservoir rock, seal
rock, and overburden rock, and the processes including trap formation and the
generation-migration-accumulation of
petroleum
are essential (Magoon and Dow,
1994). These essential elements and processes must occur in space-time so
that organic matter contained in a source rock can be converted to a
petroleum
pool. However,
petroleum
is a fragile mixture of oil and gas that is difficult
to preserve (Blanc and Connan, 1994). The longer a
petroleum
accumulation exists
in nature, the more likely the original
petroleum
in the accumulation and
essential elements of the accumulation could be destroyed partly, or even
totally.
geological
history. It is still difficult to characterize the
petroleum
geology in terms of
the essential elements of
petroleum
in South China because of the strong
deformation. In order to depict
petroleum
geology effectively in such seriously
deformed areas, the term pool-controlling factor is put forward in this paper.
The pool-controlling factor is defined as the main geologic factor that controls
the formation, destruction, preservation, and distribution of hydrocarbon pools.
Unlike the essential elements of pool formation, the connotation of the
pool-controlling factor widely indicates the reconstruction and preservation
after formation of pools. After analysis of the complexity and hierarchy of
pool- controlling factor in South China, this paper summarizes the occurrence
models based on a graded multi-factor, taking South China as a whole
petroliferous unit.
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Geological Setting for Marine South China is bounded on the north by Dabashan Plate Marginal Orogen, which separates it from the Qinling-Dabie Orogenic Belt, and the Tanlu Fault Belt, which separates it from North China Block. On the west South China is bounded by the Longmenshan and Yanyuan-Lijiang Plate Marinal Orogen, which separates it from Songpan Block and Sanjiang Orogenic Belt (Figure1). It is composed of the Yangtze Block and Cathaysian Block; they merged in late Sinian Period. Its tectonic evolution history may be divided into a stage of marine basins, extending from Sinian to middle Triassic with three tectonic cycles, and a nonmarine stage from late Triassic to Quaternary with four tectonic cycles. A series of significant tectonic movements occurred, with four dynamic types of tectonic basins, during its geologic history (Table 1). The tectonic framework controls sedimentary style and distribution of individual sequences. The Cambrian, Ordovician, Silurian, and Permian systems are distributed regionally, whereas other sequences only occur locally. Because of the complex and multi-period tectonism, the structural style and sedimentary characters differ from one place to another. South China is divided into sixteen structural subdivisions based on structural style, including Plate Marginal Orogens, Palaeozoic Craton Basins, Palaeo-uplifts, and Depressions (see Figure 1). The geological condition to form primary pools was excellent before the Indo-China movement during the Triassic, for the total thickness of marine strata from Sinian to Middle Triassic is as much as 10,000m. The secondary pools were formed by modification of primary pools since Indo-China tectonism. A number of fossil pools, remnant pools, normal oil and gas pools, CO2 pools, oil and gas seepages and bitumen on various scales are found in South China.
Complexity of Pool-Controlling FactorsIn South China, there are four sets of good and regionally distributed marine source rock (Cm1, O3-S1, P1, and P2), as well as five sets of average and local marine source rock (Cm2-3, O, S3, D, and T). These regional and local source rocks could have provided sufficient HC for primary accumulation. However, for most secondary accumulations in South China, the pool fluids did not come from regional or local source rocks. The following five types of individual and mixed-pool fluid source became very important pool-controlling factors in South China (Dai, 2003).
1) Gas cracked by crude oil. This crude oil might have been generated from kerogen or from previously accumulated oil in pools. The gas cracked from pool oil, named secondary gas, bears a direct relation to destruction of primary pools, while only indirectly related to source rock. It is the most common source of gas. 2) Gas dissolved in water. Former studies suggest that gas dissolved in water is an important pool gas source (Qiu, 1994). The principle in summary form is that original natural gas was dissolved early into formation water under high pressure, then came out of solution under lower pressure, and eventually migrated into traps. 3) Inorganic gas. It is reported that the CO2, of high purity and heavy carbon isotope composition (in Huangqiao Gas Field in lower Yangtze Block) came from the mantle, having migrated upward along deep basement faults. 4) Hydrocarbon generated from source rock. The oil and gas generated by regional and local source rocks are the primary type of HC, especially for fossil pools, such as Majiang fossil oil pool in Guizhou. 5) Hydrocarbon secondarily generated. Secondary generation took place in some areas that were uplifted during Indo-China and Yenshan movements and experienced renewed subsidence after the Yenshan movement; consequently Upper Cretaceous and Cenozoic sedimentary strata were deposited. It is thought that secondary generation occurred in localized source rocks within the Palaeozoic in the Yancheng depression in lower Yangtze Block, Lower Palaeozoic in the Chenhu area in middle Yangtze Block, Upper Palaeozoic in Shiwanshan fault-fold belt, and in the Cambrian in Chuxiong basin. 6) Mixed pool fluid source. It was composed of the preceding sources and is very common in South China.
Periods of Formation and Reconstruction
Formation Periods: Mainly controlled by source-rock maturation and
regional tectonic evolution, there are four Reconstruction Periods: There are five periods of pool reconstruction based on the statistics of oil and gas seepages and bitumen on the ground--Hercynian, Indo-China, early Yenshan, late Yenshan-early Himalayan, and late Himalayan periods. One pool could undergo one or more reconstruction periods continuously or intermittently. Because
of multi-period of formation and reconstruction, the distribution of
Palaeozoic-Mesozoic marine
Preservation
Condition for The
preservation condition varied in type and scale in South China. On a
regional scale, tectonism is the basic preservation or dissipation
condition of
Hierarchy of Pool-Controlling Factors Some factors control large regions, whereas others only control local areas. Pool-controlling factors can be classified by their controlling range. The larger the controlling range, the higher order the factor is. The pool fluid source was regarded as the highest category, category one (Table 2). Primary HC accumulation was mainly affected by regional source rock; secondarily generated HC and the gas dissolved in water was controlled by regional uplift and subsidence. Gas cracked from crude oil was affected by the regional thermal field and tectonism, and inorganic gas was obviously controlled by regional magmatism and fault systems. The relationship between fluid sources and the pools during the geological history are shown in Figure 2. The
period of pool formation and reformation was category two.
The
accumulation elements are category three, including preservation
condition, carrier
Pool Models Controlled by Graded Multi-Factors Principles for Setting up the Models
Accordingly to the above statements, it is clear that the
pool-controlling factors for marine (1) Principle of Large Scale High Category: The larger the scale of the study area, the higher the involvement of order of pool-controlling factors. When we study South China as a whole geological unit, the top category factors must be used, generally including category one and two. If a local problem is studied, only lower categories, such as three or four, are needed. (2)
Based
on category one and two, the pool fluid source, and the period of pool
formation and reconstruction, ten types of In
Sichuan, as an example, its pool fluid source is typically mixed gas,
composed primarily of the gas cracked secondarily from crude oil and the
gas generated late by source rock, with only minor amounts of gas that
was dissolved in water. Existing gas pools are reformed from
pre-existing oil and gas pools. The deformation and secondary
accumulation took considerable time and were multi-phased. The last
period was the main formation period. In Sichuan basin, some large gas
pools (e.g., Sinian If
three categories of pool-controlling factors were considered, then more
types of models in South China could be established. With the Sinian
1) The pool-controlling factor is defined as the main geologic factor that controls the formation, destruction, preservation, and distribution of hydrocarbon pools. It is especially applicable to the strongly deformed area. 2)
Marine 3) Ten
types of marine 4) The
principle, that pools are controlled by graded multi-factors, has a
significant impact on the study of the formation and distribution of
marine
Magoon, L.B., and W.G. Dow, 1994, The
Blanc, Ph., and J. Connan, 1994, Preservation,
degradation, and destruction of trapped oil, in L.B. Magoon and
W.G. Dow, eds., The Dai, Shaowu, et al., 2001, Thinking of Meso-Palaeozoic hydrocarbon exploration in South China: Oil and Gas Geology, v. 22, p.195-202. Qiu, Yunyu, et al., 1994, Pool-forming model for Weiyuan Gas Field: Natural Gas Industry, v. 14, p. 9-13. Zhao, Zongju, et al., 2002, Factors controlling the formation and evolution of Mesozoic and Palaeozoic oil/gas reservoir and their exploration targets in South China: Natural Gas Industry, v. 22, no.5, p. 1-6. |
