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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 47 (1963)

Issue: 12. (December)

First Page: 2075

Last Page: 2076

Title: Previous HitMigrationNext Hit and Segregation of oil and gas: ABSTRACT

Author(s): S. R. Silverman

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

The mechanisms and extent of oil and gas Previous HitmigrationNext Hit have long been controversial subjects among petroleum geologists. Acceptance of proposed "Previous HitprimaryNext Hit" Previous HitmigrationNext Hit mechanisms, which involve the initial transfer of oil or gas from source rock to reservoir, is further complicated because several of these hypotheses require that petroleum formation occur during the Previous HitprimaryNext Hit Previous HitmigrationNext Hit stage. "Secondary" Previous HitmigrationNext Hit, which refers to the movement of oil and gas from one reservoir position to another, is better understood because geochemists have shown that petroleums undergo small but measurable Previous HitchangesNext Hit in chemical composition during

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this type of Previous HitmigrationNext Hit. Fortunately for all concerned, these chemical Previous HitchangesNext Hit can be distinguished from those chemical transformations which stationary petroleums slowly undergo in response to reservoir temperatures and pressures over geologic time intervals.

In contrast to the relatively minor chemical Previous HitchangesNext Hit that can be attributed to secondary Previous HitmigrationNext Hit, certain petroleums, produced from distinct but narrowly separated strata within a single field or limited geographic area, are markedly different in chemical composition. Other chemical characteristics of this group of oils, however, suggest that they were derived from a common source. The observed chemical differences can not be explained as transformations of the stationary maturation variety. Detailed studies of the Previous HitcompositionalNext Hit differences encountered in such oil sequences imply that these oils must have experienced physical separations of major petroleum fractions prior to or during the Previous HitmigrationNext Hit process. This variety of petroleum segregation, capable of producing major chemical c anges, is herewith designated as a "separation-Previous HitmigrationNext Hit" mechanism to distinguish it from the typical secondary Previous HitmigrationNext Hit phenomenon which results in relatively minor petroleum composition Previous HitchangesNext Hit.

Although the recognition of a new petroleum Previous HitmigrationNext Hit mechanism may appear to further complicate our already strained concepts of petroleum Previous HitmigrationNext Hit and segregation, the existence of a "separation-Previous HitmigrationTop" mechanism is in accord with and a plausible consequence of some of the best-founded hypotheses of petroleum evolution.

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