AAPG Bulletin, V. 84,
No. 7 (July 2000), P. 1041-1054.
Petroleum and Source Rock
Characterization Based on C7 Star Plot Results: Examples from
Egypt1
Hein E. Wever2
©Copyright 2000. The American
Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.
1Manuscript received March 23, 1998;
revised manuscript received January 21, 1999; final acceptance November
15, 1999.
2StratoChem Services, 581, 5th Sector,
Palestine Street, New Maadi, Cairo, Egypt; e-mail: [email protected]
The following companies are kindly
thanked for permission to make use of their geochemical data: Agiba Petroleum
Company, Apache Darag Company, Badr Petroleum Company, Belayim Petroleum
Company, Khalda Petroleum Company, Qarun Petroleum Company, and Repsol
Exploration Egipto S.A. I am grateful to Mohamed Said and Tarek El Azhary
of StratoChem Services for introducing me to the petroleum geology of Egypt
and for their unfailing support. This paper has benefited greatly from
careful reviews by Wallace Dow, Henry Halpern, and an anonymous referee.
ABSTRACT
The main types of Egyptian oils/condensates
have been reviewed and characterized by light-end hydrocarbon, C7-based,
geochemical star plots. The technique relies on high-resolution gas chromatography
of the C7 compounds, and compositional differences are evaluated
by using crossplots and multivariate polar plots. C7 results
of oils/condensates are presented for the three main hydrocarbon provinces
in Egypt: the Gulf of Suez, the Western Desert, and the Nile Delta and
nearby Mediterranean. For the Gulf of Suez, there are two main oil types,
which were derived from (1) Cretaceous-Eocene carbonate-rich and (2) Miocene
siliciclastic-rich source rocks. For the Western Desert, there are three
distinct oil types. Two of these oil types probably originated from Middle
Jurassic carbonaceous/marine shale-rich source rocks, whereas the third
oil was produced from Upper Cretaceous argillaceous limestones. For the
Nile Delta, there are two types of oil. The majority of the oils/condensates
from this region are derived from Tertiary shale-rich source rocks, but
some may have a Cretaceous-Jurassic source. The given examples show that
the C7-based star plot is very effective as a discriminating
tool and that the C7 results are supportive and supplementary
to other, more standard, geochemical oil/condensate correlation methods.
The C7 data give reliable results over a wide range of thermal
maturities, but some compounds may be sensitive to evaporative fractionation,
water washing, and biodegradation. Special attention is given to what extent
the C7 data provide reliable information on source rock typing.
For the Egyptian petroleums, it appears that marine, carbonate-rich (type
II) derived oils have very different C7 compound concentrations
than terrestrial, clastic (type III/II) derived oils. For any oil/condensate/
source correlation study, be it on an exploratory/regional or production/field
scale, the light-end C7 data may provide extremely useful geochemical
information.