Abstract

Significant natural gas reserves have recently been discovered in the Lower Triassic oolitic reservoirs from northeastern Sichuan Basin, SW China. In the wake of the December 2003 sour gas well blow-out, this study presents an overview on the petroleum geology and geochemistry of the sour gas accumulations in the study area. Two types of natural gas accumulations were identified in the Lower Triassic oolitic reservoirs, both containing highly mature thermogenic gases, with their hydrocarbon source rocks in Upper Permian strata. Natural gases from the area south of the ancient Kaijiang-Liangping Seaway are generally sweet gases formed as the result of thermal maturation, whereas those discovered from north of the Seaway are products of both thermal maturation and thermochemical sulfate reduction of early accumulated oils in the Feixianguan Formation reservoirs. The proposed origins of the gases are supported by their chemical and stable carbon isotope compositions, as well as the presence or absence of pyrobitumens in the reservoir. The distribution of gas accumulations is controlled predominantly by the combination of lithologic and structural factors. The regional variation in the concentrations of H 2S in the gases appears related to the presence and thickness of anhydrite-bearing evaporitic rocks interbedded or intercalated with the oolitic reservoirs.

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