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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
1Manuscript received January 29, 1996; revised manuscript
received April 4, 1997; final acceptance November 14, 1997.
2Department of Petroleum Geology, China University of Geosciences,
Wuhan City, Hubei Province 430074, Peoples Republic of China.
3Nanhai West Oil Corporation, Zhanjiang, 524057, Peoples
Republic of China.
This project was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation
of China (No. 4932064 and No. 49472119). We wish to acknowledge the many
petroleum geologists from China Offshore Oil Nanhai West Corp. who, over
the last five years, have helped us to collect data. We wish to thank Leslie
B. Magoon and Kevin T. Biddle for constructive reviews and additional remarks.
We greatly benefited from discussion with Fei Qi while we were preparing
the manuscript; we also thank Quanmao Chen, who read the manuscript and
made helpful suggestions.
Abstract
Restoring burial history, correlating maturities and biomarkers of
gas-condensate source rocks, measuring fluid inclusions, and stable carbon
isotope data show that two petroleum systems charge the YA13-1 gas field
in Yinggehai and Qiongdongnan basins in the South China Sea. The first
source came from the Yanan depression in Qiongdongnan basin, at a depth
of 4450 m, with the critical moment of 5.8 Ma. The second source came from
the Yinggehai basin, at a depth of 4700 m, with the critical moment of
2.0 Ma. The YA13-1 drape anticline trap formed at 10.5 Ma, which was earlier
than gas migration and accumulation. The Meishan Formation, with 7-10 MPa
(1015-1450 psi) expelling pressure and 49-66 MPa (7105-9570 psi) overpressure
combined, effectively seals YA13-1 gases. The reservoir of Lingshui Formation
sands has average values of 14.9% porosity and 213 ´
10-3 µm2 permeability because the weathering
of the feldspathic sands at the end of the Oligocene, the preserving of
K-feldspar and quartz overgrowths, and dissolution of carbonate cements
by organic acid enhanced the reservoir quality. Consequently, trap formation
coincided with gas generation, migration, and accumulation.
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