USE OF A NEW CIRCUM-ARCTIC CHEMOMETRIC MODEL TO STUDY MIXTURES OF SHUBLIK AND YOUNGER OILS IN NORTHERN ALASKA
PETERS, Kenneth E., U.S. Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Road, MS 969, Menlo Park, CA 94025, [email protected], BIRD, Kenneth J., U.S. Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Road, MS 969, Menlo Park, CA 94025, ZUMBERGE, John E., Geomark Rsch, 9748 Whithorn Drive, Houston, TX 77095, RAMOS, L. Scott, InfoMetrix, Inc, 10634 E. Riverside Drive, Suite 250, Bothell, WA 98011, and GAUTIER, Donald L., U.S. Geol Survey, 345 Middlefield Rd., MS 969, Menlo Park, CA 94025
Chemometric (multivariate) analysis of biomarker and isotopic data were used
to infer the age, lithology, and identity of the source rocks for >1000
Circum-Arctic crude oil samples collected above ~60oN
latitude. On the North Slope, two of the seven oil groups determined by this
method originated from marine
carbonate
and marine marl
facies
of the
Middle-Upper Triassic Shublik Formation source rock. The so-called marl oils
occur mainly in Triassic reservoirs near Prudhoe Bay Field (e.g., Prudhoe Bay-1,
Gwydyr Bay S-1, and Foggy Island-1 wells). The so-called
carbonate
oils occur
mainly in Lower Cretaceous reservoirs to the northwest of Prudhoe Bay along the
Barrow Arch (e.g., Fish Creek-1, Phoenix-1, and Mukluk-1 wells). Three scenarios
could explain the composition of the marl oils: (1) a marl
facies
of the Shublik
Formation occurs near Prudhoe Bay, (2)
carbonate
oils mixed with oils from
Jurassic-Cretaceous argillaceous source rocks (e.g., Kingak Shale, Hue Shale,
pebble shale unit), or (3) a combination of the above.
This paper addresses the origins of the Shublik oil groups using
chemometrics, age-related biomarker ratios, and geologic setting. Chemometrics
shows that the
carbonate
and marl oils fall on a mixing line with oils that
originated from Cretaceous Hue Shale in principal component space. Age-related
biomarker ratios distinguish Triassic Shublik
carbonate
from Cretaceous Hue
Shale oils but the marl oils give intermediate ages, consistent with mixing of
oils at Prudhoe Bay. Nonetheless, some marl oils occur in geologic settings that
preclude mixing with younger oils and their biomarker ages are consistent with
distinct
carbonate
and marl
facies
of the Shublik Formation.