Abstract
Potential source rocks from three wells (Chalbi-3, Sirius-1, and Ndovu-1) in the Anza Basin of northeastern Kenya were analyzed using elemental carbon-hydrogen-nitrogen analysis, and mineralogical characterization by X-ray diffraction (XRD), X-ray fluorescence (XRF), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM-EDX).)<strong>. </strong>A Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS) analysis of the saturated aliphatic biomarkers was carried out to illuminate the organic matter source. The analytical results revealed that the source rocks have moderate to high total organic carbon (%TOC) content, suggesting conditions in the Basin favor organic production and preservation. The Hydrogen Indices (HI: 0.19–0.60 atomic ratios) typify a predominance of mixed type II/III (oil/gas-prone) with more type III (gas-prone) and less II (oil-prone) kerogens. The FTIR, XRF, and XRD results reveal that the studied source rock samples comprised mainly of quartz, followed by silicate-clay minerals and calcite minerals. The solvent-extractable organic matter investigation revealed biomarker distributions of n-alkanes and isoprenoids (pristane/ phytane ratios), suggesting that source rocks were derived from algae and bacteria deposited weakly anoxic and low toxic environmental conditions, with minimal contribution from terrestrial organic matter sources. Consequently, all three wells have hydrocarbon generation potential, particularly Ndovu-1, which displays good organic matter content to produce oil and gas. The hydrocarbon potential is excellent and capable of making expulsions of oil and/or gas from the wells at sufficient depths.
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