Abstract

ABSTRACT The lower member of the Jurassic Smackover Formation is a source rock for crude oil along the northern Gulf Rim from east Texas to Florida. Type I crude oils occur in Smackover reservoirs of east Texas, north Louisiana, south Arkansas, and Mississippi, and were generated by algal-derived kerogen preserved in an anoxic environment. Type II crude oils in Smackover reservoirs of Alabama and Florida originate from kerogen with a terrestrial component preserved in a less anoxic environment. Thermal maturity differences across the Gulf Rim resulted in generation and destruction of crude oil at much shallower depths in east Texas, north Louisiana, and south Arkansas than in Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. Jurassic through Cretaceous timing of migration and faulting permitted vertical migration of Type I Smackover crude oils to many Upper Jurassic, Lower Cretaceous, and Upper Cretaceous reservoirs along the Gulf Rim. Vertical migration of Type II crude oils was less significant, especially in Alabama, because of evaporite barriers to migration. The high contents of hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide in deep, hot Smackover reservoirs are related to thermochemical sulfate reduction that has driven early destruction of methane. Compositionally distinct crude oils from Upper Cretaceous and Lower Tertiary siliciclastic source rocks are found in reservoirs south of the Gulf Rim.

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