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Abstract
Chapter from: M
66: Hydrocarbon Migration And Its Near-Surface Expression
Edited By
Dietmar Schumacher and Michael A. AbramsAuthors:
Jane Thrasher, David Strait, and Ricardo Alvarez Lugo Geochemistry, Generation, Migration
Published 1996 as
part of Memoir 66
Copyright © 1996 The American Association of Petroleum
Geologists. All Rights Reserved. |
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Thrasher,
J., D. Strait, and R. Alvarez Lugo, 1996b, Surface geochemistry as an exploration
tool in the South Caribbean, in D. Schumacher and M. A. Abrams,
eds., Hydrocarbon migration and its near-surface expression: AAPG Memoir
66, p. 373-384. |
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Chapter
29
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Surface
Geochemistry as an Exploration Tool in the South Caribbean |
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Jane Thrasher
BP Exploration
Research and Engineering
Centre
Sunbury-on-Thames, U.K.
Present address:
Sir Alexander Gibb &
Partners
Reading, U.K.
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David Strait
BP Exploration Company
(Colombia) Ltd.
Santafe de Bogota, Colombia
Present address:
BP Exploration (Alaska)
Anchorage, Alaska, U.S.A. |
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Ricardo
Alvarez Lugo
BP Exploration Company
(Colombia) Ltd.
Santafe de Bogota, Colombia
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Abstract
The risk on
petroleum charge in acreage in the South Caribbean, offshore Colombia,
has been assessed using integrated seepage detection techniques, including
seabed coring. Eight offshore wells have been drilled but have only discovered
limited volumes of dry gas. Oil seepage is well known onshore in the basin,
and mud diapirs can be seen on seismic profiles offshore. Seepage detection
and sampling techniques can be used to better define exploration risk by
determining if the oil seepage extends into the offshore area, and if so,
what is the most likely source of the oil.
An airborne survey located
two main areas of possible offshore oil seepage and was followed by a shallow
coring survey that retrieved oil-bearing cores from an offshore mud volcano.
Other cores collected on mud diapirs and shallow faults identified from
seismic did not retrieve readily identifiable oil. The oil extracted from
the offshore mud volcano core was correlated with oil samples collected
from onshore seepage sites. Biomarker analysis led to identification of
two oil families in onshore seeps, one mainly from a Cretaceous marine
carbonate and the other from a Tertiary mixed marine-terrestrial source.
Tertiary oils are common in northwestern South America, but are seldom
volumetrically important; a Cretaceous marine carbonate source is likely
to have much more potential. The offshore seep correlated with the Tertiary
oil.
The other shallow cores did
not contain readily identifiable oil, but appeared to have abundant recent
organic material (ROM) masking any potential thermogenic signature on gas
chromatography or gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) results.
Even cores with sufficient oil to leave a slick on the sea surface during
retrieval were overprinted by ROM on the GC-MS hopane and sterane traces.
High resolution GC-MS, however, did show that the cores contained aromatic
biomarkers in the relative proportions expected in thermogenic oils but
not in ROM. The thermal maturities derived from these biomarkers made a
good match with the crudely modeled maturity of a middle Tertiary source
rock. The extensive ROM overprint is probably due to the present-day depositional
environment. Most of the mud diapirs and shallow faults identified on seismic
profiles do not break the surface, but are covered by a veneer of recent
sediments; any petroleum leaking into this is diluted by the abundant ROM.
The results of the seabed
core analysis alone were ambiguous, but once integrated with geologic models
and other seepage data, they improved the definition of the exploration
risk on petroleum charge. Cores with a wide geographic spread offshore
do contain seeped thermogenic petroleum, but this is most likely from a
Tertiary source rather than the potentially more prolific Cretaceous source
identified onshore. |
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