Abstract

The Cretaceous Garbutt Formation shale and crude oils from the Cretaceous Chinkeh Formation in Liard Basin were subjected to geochemical analysis including biomarker fingerprinting. The Chinkeh oils are sweet light oils with API gravity and geochemical markers typical for the late stage oil window maturity. The oils show good correlation to the Garbutt shale extracts for their sterane compositions, while there are some minor discrepancies amongst their terpane distributions. These differences include enhanced contribution of tricyclic terpanes, high C23 tricyclic terpanes versus C30 hopane and low C24 tetracyclic terpane versus C26 tricyclic terpanes for the Chinkeh oil compared with the Garbutt shale extracts. Although not analyzed during this study, the Triassic Toad/Grayling interval, as stratigraphic equivalents of the Montney and Doig formations in Western Canada Sedimentary Basin may account for the terpane compositional features. Therefore, it is likely that the Chinkeh oils are mainly sourced from the Cretaceous Garbutt shale with minor additional contributions from a Triassic source. The Garbutt Shale is immature in the Horn River Basin, while in the Liard Basin in a north to south transect the unit's thermal maturity ranges from early mature oil window to wet gas/condensate window, and thus may be prospective for unconventional liquid hydrocarbon resource recovery.

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