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Petroleum Systems of the Mumbai Offshore Basin, India*
By
Basant Giri Goswami1, Harvir Singh1, Ashok Kumar Bhatnagar1, Adarsh Kumar Sinha1, And Ram Raj Singh1
Search and Discovery Article #10134 (2007)
Posted September 27, 2007
*Adapted from extended abstract prepared for AAPG Annual Convention, Long Beach California, April 1-4, 2007
1Geochemistry Labs, Keshava Deva Malaviya Institute of Petroleum Exploration (KDMIPE), Oil & Natural Gas Corporation Ltd., 9, Kaulagarh Road, Dehradun, India-248 195
Abstract
Mumbai Offshore Basin, a pericratonic rift basin in the western continental shelf of India, covers about 148,000 km2 from coast to 200 m isobath. The basin is divided into six tectonic blocks (Tapti-Daman, Diu, Heera-Panna-Bassein, Mumbai high-Deep Continental Shelf [DCS], Ratnagiri, and Shelf Margin), and the sedimentary fill ranges from 1100-5000 m. Several large oil and gas fields have been discovered in this basin, and the presence of hydrocarbons has been established in the multiple pay zones belonging to L-III limestone reservoir of Miocene age (only in Mumbai high), Mukta (early Oligocene), Bassein (middle Eocene), Panna (Paleocene to early Eocene) reservoirs, and Daman (early Miocene-late Oligocene) and Mahuva (early Oligocene) formations in Tapti Daman block. This work presents the detailed geochemical evaluation on more than 200 rock extracts and 250 oil samples and maturity modeling in key generative depressions of all the tectonic blocks of the basin.
Studies indicate that Paleocene to early Eocene Panna Formation has good to excellent source-rock characteristics in the basinal part of every block in the entire basin. The middle of Panna Formation attained the maturity of 0.6% VRo equivalent at about 12-20 Ma. The Panna source rocks have predominantly Type III kerogen in lower layers and Type II and III mixed kerogen in upper layers. However, few source-rock layers in Mahim graben and Deep Continental Shelf (DCS) area contain Type I kerogen. Based on the variations in organofacies, the oils have been placed into two groups. The first group oils, having only terrestrial source input, correlate with the source-rock extracts of lower layers, whereas the second group oils, with terrestrial and marine mixed input, correlate with the source-rock extracts of upper layers of the Panna Formation. Based on the reservoir and source combinations, major petroleum systems in the basin are: Panna-L-III, Panna-Mukta, Panna-Bassein, and Panna-Panna.
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Introduction
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
· 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 StratigraphyMumbai 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:
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
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