Abstract

The Paleogene sandstone reservoir in the Huangtong Sag of the Fushan Depression is one of the most commercially prolific oil accumulations in the Beibuwan Basin, South China Sea. In this study, twenty-seven crude oil samples from four oilfields in the sag were geochemically analyzed and classified into three oil groups. Oils in the Meitai and Hongguang oilfields show similar geochemical characteristics, with relatively abundant C30 4α-methyl-24-ethylcholestanes and low contents of oleanane and C19+20 tricyclic terpanes (TT), and therefore may be derived from the same source kitchen. Oils from the Yong’an oilfield have a greater proportion of oleanane and C19+20 TT compounds. Oils from the Chaoyang oilfield have intermediate contents of these biomarkers and proportionate values of other related parameters. The unimodal distribution pattern of homogenization temperatures of fluid inclusions found in all the Paleogene reservoirs indicates a single episode of charging. Combining this understanding with the reconstruction of stratigraphy-burial and geothermal histories by 1-D basin modeling, the petroleum charging time was determined to be between 8–2 Ma (the end of the middle Miocene to the early Pliocene). Hydrocarbon migration orientation and charging pathways were traced using molecular indicators (4-/1-methyldibenzothiophene and 1-/4-methodibenzofuran). In the Chaoyang oilfield, the values of these geochemical parameters decreased with decreasing burial depth, indicating vertical oil migration along faults, which are plentiful in the sag. Sandstone bodies with deeper burial depths may therefore be the most promising exploration targets in the Chaoyang area. The Yong’an oils generally migrate from the northwest toward the southeast, suggesting that the source kitchen for the Yong’an oilfield is in the northwest. By similar inference, the hydrocarbon source kitchen for the Hongguang-Meitai area is likely to be on the north side of the Hongguang-Meitai area. By tracing these hydrocarbon charging pathways, the northwest of the Yong’an area and the northern part of the Hongguang-Meitai area are identified as the most promising areas for exploration.

Highlights

  • The Fushan Depression, in the southeastern of the Beibuwan Basin, is a proven hydrocarbon-abundant province, with a yield of 400,000 tons per year [1]

  • The principal source rocks and reservoirs are in the Paleogene Liushagang

  • All the samples in this study had relatively high contents of pristane relative to phytane, with ratios ranging from 3.36 to 4.43 which suggests that the source rocks were deposited in an oxidizing environment

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Summary

Introduction

The Fushan Depression, in the southeastern of the Beibuwan Basin, is a proven hydrocarbon-abundant province, with a yield of 400,000 tons per year [1]. The depression is divided into the Bailian and Huangtong sags by an oblique transfer zone. The geothermal evolution, oil-source correlation, hydrocarbon charging, and oil migration orientation of the Huachang-Bailian area, in the central and eastern parts of the depression, have been extensively discussed [1,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16]. In a study of the geothermal history and homogenization temperatures of fluid inclusions in the area, Wang et al (2016) proposed that the oblique transition zone has experienced only one episode of hydrocarbon charging, around the Middle Miocene to Pliocene, which corresponds to the main stage of the Dongsha Movement [6]. A number of geochemical parameters, related to alkyl dibenzothiophenes, alkyl dibenzofurans, benzo[b]

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