Abstract
Abstract Terrestrial pre-salt sediments are not only good lithologic reservoirs similar to marine pre-salt carbonates, but also are supposed to have high hydrocarbon generation potential because the overlying terrestrial thick-bedded salts are generally preserved in basin centers. However, their status as source rock has attracted much less attention than as reservoir. In this paper, we choose the Qaidam Basin as an example and study the minerology, organic geochemistry, and organic petrology of the pre-salt sediments in a hydrocarbon-rich unit, where abundant petroleum resources have been discovered under halite beds. LithoScanner logging of six wells and X-ray diffraction results of 378 samples show that terrestrial pre-salt sediments are characterized by mixed siliciclastic-carbonate-sulphate rocks and their relative proportions are laterally varied. Quartz, feldspar and clay minerals are of allochthonous origin and classified as argillaceous endmember while dolomite and ankerite are of autochthonous origin as carbonate endmember. Organic geochemistry analysis of 118 samples show great variability in TOC, S2, and Tmax values, and this variability is not related to mineral composition heterogeneity as hydrogen index is not well correlated with detritus, carbonate, and sulphate minerals contents, indicating the interacting controls of source rocks by both exogenetic and endogenetic processes in brackish-mesosaline lakes. Strong bacterial reworking of organic matter results in the dominant macerals of pre-salt sediments as bituminite and oil generation at low maturity levels. Sealed by impermeable halite beds and in close proximity to reservoirs, the generating hydrocarbon by pre-salt good source rocks is effectively accumulated, which entails hydrocarbon exploration under halite beds in other terrestrial salt-bearing basins.
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