About This Item
- Full TextFull Text(subscription required)
- Pay-Per-View PurchasePay-Per-View
Purchase Options Explain
Share This Item
The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
1Manuscript received October 19, 1998; revised manuscript received September
21, 1999; final acceptance November 15, 1999.
2Department of Petroleum Geology, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan
430074, Hubei, Peoples Republic of China; e-mail: [email protected]
3China National Offshore Oil Corporation, Beijing, Peoples Republic of
China.
ABSTRACT
drill
-
stem
test and fluid inclusion
homogenization temperatures, Rock-Eval Tmax, vitrinite reflectance, and
clay-mineral transformation profiles. Such a thermal anomaly suggests focused, rapid flow
of deeply sourced hydrothermal fluids, which has shifted the threshold depth to the onset
of hydrocarbon generation upward by about 500 m. The Dongfang gas field shows considerable
variation in nitrogen and carbon dioxide content, with nitrogen content ranging from less
than 5 to 31.2% and carbon dioxide content ranging from less than 1 to 88.9%. Hydrocarbon
gases and associated condensates show high maturities and have been generated most
probably from the Meishan and Sanya formations of Miocene age. Carbon dioxide in gases
with CO2 content less than 10% is organic in origin, whereas carbon dioxide in
gases with CO2 content higher than 10% is inorganic in origin and has been
generated from high-temperature decomposition of carbonates. Most gases display negative d15N values. Gases with nitrogen content
higher than 15% always contain organic CO2 (CO2d13C values lighter than -10o/oo,), and the nitrogen
contents decrease as the d13C values
for methane and ethane become heavier, suggesting an organic origin of the nitrogen gas
generated in the catagenetic stage (source rock Ro <2.0%), before the
significant thermal decomposition of carbonate took place. Systematic interreservoir
compositional heterogeneities occur in the gas field, which, along with the thermal regime
and fluid-inclusion homogenization-temperature measurements, give a clear suggestion of
the reservoir-filling history: methane-dominated gases with relatively high nitrogen
content and a small amount of organic CO2 accumulated first, and carbon
dioxide-rich gases with hydrocarbon components of higher maturity injected into the
reservoir later. Interreservoir compositional heterogeneities, which have the advantage of
being unaffected by in-reservoir mixing processes, can be effective indicators of the
field-filling history, especially when they are studied in combination with
fluid-inclusion and reservoir-diagenesis analyses. The short-lived, transient nature of
the thermal effect of fluid flow and the wide variation of the toluene/n-heptane values
seem to suggest episodic fluid injections from the overpressured systems into the
reservoirs.
Pay-Per-View Purchase Options
The article is available through a document delivery service. Explain these Purchase Options.
Watermarked PDF Document: $14 | |
Open PDF Document: $24 |
AAPG Member?
Please login with your Member username and password.
Members of AAPG receive access to the full AAPG Bulletin Archives as part of their membership. For more information, contact the AAPG Membership Department at [email protected].