Figure Captions
Mumbai offshore basin accounts for nearly two-thirds of the annual
petroleum production of India. The mature
source
rocks are present
in the lower Eocene-Paleocene Panna Formation. Further, marginally
mature potential
source
rocks within Oligocene in Tapti-Daman area
and within Neogene in DCS and deeper part of the basin also exist.
Hydrocarbons have been discovered in multiple reservoirs in this
basin, ranging from fractured basement to middle Miocene. The Mumbai
offshore basin has three major depressions: Surat and its southward
extension to Ratnagiri in the
east
, Saurashtra low in the northwest,
and Murud and Rajpur lows in the southwest. Due to multiplicity of
depressions,
source
rocks, and reservoirs, oil-
source
genetic
relationship is a challenge. The understanding of genetic
correlation amongst oils and
source
rocks is a prerequisite to model
hydrocarbon generation, expulsion, and entrapment. The prime
objectives of this study are:
·
To geochemically characterize the
source
rocks and
oils through conventional biomarkers, non-biomarkers, and stable
carbon isotopic composition.
·
To carry-out 1D-thermal maturity modeling in key
generative depressions.
·
To provide geochemical inputs for petroleum system
modeling.
Geological
Setting and Stratigraphy
Mumbai offshore basin, a divergent passive continental margin basin,
is located on the continental shelf off the west coast of India. The
basin is bounded by the western coastline of India in the
east
,
Saurashtra arch in the north, Vengurla arch in the south, and west
margin basement arch in the west (Figures 1
and 2). The basin was formed due to
extensional tectonics at the time of rifting of the Indian plate
from Madagascar during Late Jurassic-Early Cretaceous period.
Large-scale volcanic eruptions, which covered most of the basin,
followed this episode. As the rifting continued, the immature
sediments deposited at the toe of faults as alluvial fans, filled
the initial morphotectonic depressions during Paleocene. This was
followed by the first marine incursion towards the close of
Paleocene and beginning of early Eocene. Thus, early Eocene marks a
widespread transgression. Sediments were deposited in deltaic to
restricted marine to shallow marine environments. Sedimentation
during this period caused some adjustments in the basin. The early
Oligocene transgression covered most parts of the basinal area and
inundated parts of Mumbai high. A major unconformity is noted at the
top of lower Oligocene. Sea level rise during early Miocene
submerged large areas of the basin and terminated the . Oligocene
delta progradation. The middle Miocene transgression marks the last
phase of the widespread carbonate sedimentation in the Mumbai high–DCS
area (Basu et al., 1982; Zutshi et al., 1993).
The
basin has a NW-SE-trending horst-graben geometry. The grabens are
bounded by normal faults, and the horsts/ridges are dissected by
NE-SW-trending cross faults. On the basis of its structural
configuration and its nature, as well as the type of sediment fill,
the basin is divided into six tectonic blocks: Tapti-Daman, Diu,
Heera-Panna-Bassein, Bombay high-DCS, Ratnagiri, and Shelf Margin
blocks.
The
main Mumbai high block is surrounded by three depressions:
-
Surat depression
(Daman, Purna and Navsari lows) and its southward extension
through Mahim depression in the
east
.
-
Saurashtra low in
the northwest.
-
Southern
paleosink and Murad depression in the southwest.
The
Shelf Margin block bounded on its west by Kori-Comorin ridge and
east
by Paleogene hinge and its northern part includes Saurashtra
offshore (Figures 1 and
2). Surat depression
and its southward extension through Mahim depression to Vijaydurg
depression in Ratnagiri block are the prime depocenter of the
clastic sediments of early Eocene to Paleocene age. Murud depression
and Saurashtra low had relatively more open marine environment due
to minor shielding provided by the west basement arch compared to
Surat-Mahim depression.
The
main reservoir rocks in the basin are the limestones ranging in age
from Eocene to middle Miocene. Clastic sequence of Paleogene also
hosts the hydrocarbons. The extensive post-Miocene shale acts as a
regional cap
rock
in the basin. The local shale interbeds within
limestones act as a local cap rocks for different pay zones.
However, in Ratnagiri block, compact and tight limestones may also
act as cap rocks for hydrocarbon accumulations in fractured
limestone reservoirs.
Oils mainly occur in the limestone horizons of lower Miocene age
(L-III) in major hydrocarbon fields; viz., Mumbai high, Panna, S.
Bassein, Heera and Ratna, Mahuva and Daman pay (Oligocene) in Tapti
area, Bassein pay (middle Eocene to upper Eocene) in
Panna-Bassein-Heera and Ratna areas and Ratna pay (mid Eocene to
lower Eocene) in Ratnagiri area. With the recent oil occurrences in
the sands of Panna Formation in Vasai
East
, the Panna pay is
emerging as a commercial pay zone. Few oils also occur in clastic /
fractured basement reservoirs and middle Miocene L-II and S1 pays.
The majority of these oils show moderate API gravity (25-40°), high
pour point (27-33°C), significant wax (7-20%), and low sulphur
(0.1-0.3%) contents. These oils are predominantly aliphatic, having
high saturate/aromatic ratio (>1.5) and saturate content (>40%).
Only a few oils and mostly condensates were found in the Tapti Daman
block.
Source
Rocks
The
clastic sediments in the lower Eocene to Paleocene sedimentary
sequences (Panna Formation) are the principal
source
rocks across
the basin. Thickness of the
source
rock
varies from 30 m to 1000 m
depending on location. The excellent
source
rocks of restricted
marine to lagoonal deposits within the Panna Formation in the
Central graben and adjoining area are the principal
source
of
hydrocarbon accumulation in the basin. In the Mahim graben, a
400-m-thick sequence in the Panna Formation contains very
good/excellent oil-prone effective
source
-
rock
facies, which account
for the commercial petroleum reservoirs within Bassein, Mukta and
Heera formations in the
east
of Panna and Bassein fields (average
TOC=2.3- 15.4%; average S2=3.5-50.1 mg HC/g
rock
; average HI=112-277
mg HC/g TOC). Organic-rich mature
source
-
rock
sequences in the Panna
Formation occur in depressions across the DCS area and
west-southwest of Mumbai high (average TOC=1.5-5.6%; average
S2=2.6-11.6 mg HC/g
rock
; average HI=94-270 mg HC/g TOC).
Source
-
rock
data from the deepest exploratory well in the Vijaydurg
graben of Ratna depression show good, mature
source
-
rock
section in
the lowermost unit of the Panna Formation and thin coal and coaly
shale layers with very good
source
-
rock
quality at the top of Panna
Formation. In the Tapti-Daman area, two exploratory wells, located
in the eastern flank of Navsari low, contain about 70-m-thick oil
and gas prone
source
-
rock
layers (average TOC=2.3-5.4%; average
S2=2.5-8.3 mg HC/g
rock
; average HI=91-154 mg HC/g TOC), and better
source
rocks are more likely to occur in distal environments in the
Purna graben and west Daman low corresponding to these layers. The
sedimentary column in Shelf Margin areas is dominated by clastics,
except in middle Eocene, which has carbonates.
Source
-
rock
potential
of the Paleogene sediments is moderate, but some good organic
carbon-rich
source
-
rock
layers are present in Neogene sediments.
1D-thermal maturity modeling, using Genex 1D-basin modeling
software, indicates that the sedimentary sequences of the Panna
Formation from a well near the Mahim graben have generated
substantial oil. These
source
-
rock
sequences started expelling oil
from late Oligocene (30Ma) with peak expulsion spreading from 12 Ma
to present day along the flank of graben (Figure
3).
These
source
-
rock
layers distributed in Mahim graben area are
overmature, generating gas in the center of the depression, as the
maturation level is high (Ro =1.3-2.0%). Thus, the entire section
appears to be the major gas
source
for the giant Bassein gas field
adjacent to this hydrocarbon kitchen. Maturity modeling of a well
from the low of Bassein platform also shows significant generation,
which began 20 Ma, and peak expulsion started taking place from 6 Ma
and continues to present day. Approximately 120-m-thick dominantly
marine organic-rich
source
-
rock
section from a well near the
depocenter of DCS area is predicted to have begun significant
generation 12 Ma, with peak expulsion occurring from 5 Ma and
continuing to present day. In Ratna depression, thick lowermost
source
-
rock
section began significant generation 18 Ma.
Based on several bulk parameters,
conventional biomarkers, and stable carbon isotopic composition,
oils of the Mumbai Offshore Basin, irrespective of their pay zones,
can be broadly categorized in two groups with some overlaps. Group I
oils show high values of Pr/Ph ratio (> 3.0), high canonical
variables (C.V. > 0.47), relatively low abundances of bicadinanes,
oleanane, oleanoid triterpanes, tricyclic terpanes, predominance of
C29
over C27,
and C28
regular steranes, and presence of
diasteranes. However, the group II oils have low Pr/Ph (<3.0), low
Pr/nC17
(<1) ratios, low values of C.V. (<0.47),
relatively high abundances of bicadinanes, oleanane, oleanoid
triterpanes, presence of C30
steranes (both 24-n-propyl
cholestane and 4-methyl steranes), and are isotopically heavier than
the group I oils. The occurrences of these genetically dissimilar
oils are not following any distinct pattern and are present in all
the blocks in different pay zones. Group I oils are generated from
predominantly type III organic matter and deposited under fluvial
conditions whereas the group II oils are derived from mixed organic
matter input with significant marine organic matter contribution and
deposited under marginal marine conditions. However, all these oils
have been generated at similar maturity levels.
Studies also indicate that
source
-
rock
extracts of the lower Eocene-Paleocene sediments from the peripheral
part of the various lows in different blocks contain mainly
terrestrial organic matter deposited in fluctuating fluvial/fluvio-deltaic
to marginal marine environments. These
source
rocks are adequately
mature to generate hydrocarbons and are genetically correlatable
with the group I oils. Several thin streaks in the upper layers of
the lower Eocene-Paleocene sediments in the central part of these
depressions also show marine organic matter and these
source
rocks
are genetically correlatable with the group II oils. The difference
in the relative abundance of the several biomarkers; i.e.,
bicadinanes, oleanane, pr/ph ratio, etc., in two different group
oils seems to be controlled mainly by the change in the depositional
environment from the basinal part (more anoxic) towards the
peripheral area (less anoxic). These two groups of oils and their
probable
source
rocks are clearly differentiated by a plot of
bicadinanes/C30
hopane versus oleanane/C30
hopane ratios (Figure
4A) and stable carbon isotopic composition (Figure
4B). Though some lacustrine facies were also present in a few
wells in Mahim graben and DCS low, no oil with dominant lacustrine
biomarker characteristics was found in the basin so far. This may be
due to charging of reservoirs from the multiple
source
rocks.
Results also show that the studied oils and the potential
source
rocks have been generated at similar maturity level (moderate to
peak oil window). Presence of oleanoid triterpanes in both oils and
source
-
rock
extracts and also the carbazoles distribution in oils
support the conclusion that, except for the oils of Mumbai high,
most of the oils in different blocks are locally generated and have
not experienced a long distance migration.
Based on the reservoirs and the
source
combinations, the various petroleum systems in the basin are: the
Panna-Daman, Panna-Mahuva (only in Tapti Daman block) and Panna-L-III,
Panna-Mukta, Panna-Bassein, and Panna-Panna.
The authors thank the ONGC management for
granting permission to publish this paper. The views expressed are
those of the authors and not necessarily of the organization to
which they belong. We are grateful to Shri Jokhan Ram, Executive
Director-Chief and Dr. Anil Bhandari, General Manager, Geology-Head
Geoscience Research Group (C), Keshava Deva Malaviya Institute of
Petroleum Exploration, ONGC, Dehradun, for support and
encouragement.
Basu, D.N., A. Banerjee,
and D.M. Tamhane, 1982, Facies distribution and petroleum geology of
Bombay offshore basin, India: Journal of Petroleum Geology, v. 5, p.
57-75.
Zutshi, P.L., A. Sood, P.
Mohapatra, K.K.V. Ramani, A.K. Dwivedi, and H.C. Srivastava, 1993,
Bombay offshore basin-lithostratigraphy of Indian petroliferous
basins (document-V): Unpublished document, KDMIPE, ONGC Dehradun.
Wandrey, C.J., 2004, Bombay geologic province Eocene
to Miocene composite total petroleum system, India: U.S. Geological
Survey Bulletin 2208-F, 26p. (http://pubs.usgs.gov/bul/2208/F/b2208-f.pdf).