Abstract

More than 600 oils from Texas, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, and adjacent offshore areas were analyzed for gasoline and C{sub 10+} compounds. The following parameters were evaluated geographically: heptane and isoheptane values (paraffincity indices), toluene/n-heptane (aromaticity index) and n-heptadecane/pristane. Isoheptane value is defined as the ratio of {approximately}methylhexanes to dimethylcyclopentanes; heptane value is defined as the percentage of n-heptane in the chromatographic suite between, and including cyclohexane through methylcyclohexane. The maturity trends defined by heptane and isoheptane values form coherent groupings that mimic the regional geologic structure. Thermal maturity is consistently higher when determined from isoheptane ratios than from heptane ratios. The heptane ratio, which is more sensitive to biodegradation then the isoheptane ratio, often spuriously indicates suppressed maturity levels due to alteration. Nevertheless, maturity levels defined by gasoline-range compositions appear to be higher than those defined by a higher molecular weight biomarkers (i.e., steranes, triterpanes). A possible explanation is that hydrocarbon fluids in the Gulf Coast are often a combination of fractions derived from organic matter at different stages of thermal evolution, implying progressive expulsion of hydrocarbons of increasing maturity from one or more sources, mixing, and multiple episodes of reservoir filling.

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