Abstract
From 5000 m underground to the surface, there is a multi-layer hydrocarbon reservoir under the Wuerhe nose uplift in the Junggar Basin. Light oil, heavy oil, oil sand, and solid bitumen are found in Permian to Cretaceous strata. The normal crude oil present under heavy oil and solid bitumen reservoir can easily ignored by explorers. To effectively exploit the petroleum and bitumen mineral resources in the Junggar Basin, geochemical characteristics of crude oils in the different layers were analyzed. It is concluded that the crude oils and bitumen minerals came from Permian source rocks of alkaline lacustrine facies. Combined with tectonic movement analysis, two stages of accumulation occurred in research area. During the Indosinian Tectonic movement, the crude oil generated from Permian source rocks first migrated upwards along large faults and then accumulated in the Permian, Triassic, and Jurassic reservoirs. The crude oil of the Jurassic reservoir was seriously biodegraded and a high abundance of 25-norhopane was detected. At the end of the Yanshan movement, small normal faults were developed to connect the oil in the Triassic reservoirs to the surface. The light components of the oil in the fault system quickly volatilized and left solid bitumen minerals in the faults. Due to the plugging effect of “bitumen plug”, the oil and gas in the lower part cannot migrate upward and be damaged. Therefore, light oil-heavy oil–oil sand and bitumen minerals were formed from the bottom to the top. The research result will also have a guiding significance for oil and gas exploration in the northwest margin of the Junggar Basin.
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