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Petroleum

Geology

Objectives

Petroleum Geology
Be able to
Discuss basic elements of geology
Identify major rock types
Describe basic sedimentary environments
Describe the origin of petroleum
Identify trap types
Define and describe the important reservoir
properties, porosity and permeability

Outline

Petroleum Geology
Plate tectonics
The rock cycle and geologic time
Rock types
Sedimentary environments
The origin of fossil fuels
Migration and accumulation
Reservoir traps
Reservoir properties

Crustal Plates

Plate boundaries
Relative velocities (cm/yr)

Continental crust
Oceanic crust

Plate Tectonics and Mantle


Convection
Lithosphere forms from
hot rising magma
Lithosphere cools
as it spreads

Asthenosphere

Cooled lithosphere sinks

Basic Elements of Plate


Tectonics

DIVERGENT BOUNDARY
Mid-ocean ridge

CONVERGENT BOUNDARY
Plate subduction

Sea floor spreading


Lithosphere

Volcanism

Mountain
building

Deep-sea
trench

Oceanic
crust

Continental
crust

Magma rising

Asthenosphere
Magma forming

Earthquake centres

Rock Cycle
Weathering and erosion
Deposition in oceans
and on continents
Uplift

Sediments

Increasing
temperature
and pressure

Uplift
Uplift

Igneous
rocks

Sedimentary
rocks

Heat &
pressure

Heat &
pressure

Cooling
Melting
Magma

Burial and
lithification

Metamorphic
rocks

Geologic Time Scale


0
0.01
1.6
5.3
24
37
57
66

Epoch

Period

Recent
Pleistocene
Pliocene
Miocene
Oligocene
Eocene
Paleocene

Era

Eon

Quaternary
Tertiary

Cenozoic
Phanerozoic

144
208
245
286
360
408
438
505
570

Cretaceous
Jurassic
Triassic
Permian
Carboniferous
Devonian
Ordovician
Silurian
Cambrian

Mesozoic

Paleozoic

Proterozoic

Geologic Time Scale - Biostratigraphy


Jurassic period

Triassic period

Permian period
Pennsylvanian period
Mississippian period

245 m.y
146 m.y 208 m.y

290 m.y

363 m.y

1 b.y

65 m.y

510 m.y

57 m.y
570 m.y

35 m.y
23 m.y
5 m.y
0.01 m.y

Holocene epoch

ERA
PERIOD
EPOCH

Devonian
period

323 m.y

4.6 billion
years ago

409 m.y
439 m.y

Silurian
period
2 b.y
Evolution
of cells with
nucleus
3 b.y First
fossil
cells

4 b.y Oldest rocks


dated on Earth

Rock Types

Classification of Rocks

Rock-forming Source of
process
material

IGNEOU
S

SEDIMENTARY

METAMORPHIC

Melting of rocks in hot,


deep crust and
upper mantle

Weathering and
erosion of rocks
exposed at surface

Rocks under high


temperatures
and pressures in
deep crust

Crystallization
(Solidification of melt)

Sedimentation, burial
and lithification

Recrystallization in
solid state of new
minerals

Igneous Rocks
Basalt

Gabbro

Examples

Rhyolite

Granite

Metamorphic Rocks
Examples

Mica schist

Marble

Gneiss

Slate

Quartzite

Clastic Sedimentary Rocks


Conglomerate

Breccia

Examples

Sandstone

Shale

Sedimentary Environments

Clastic Sedimentary Environments


Environment

Agent Of Transportation
Deposition

Sediments

Alluvial

Rivers

Sand, gravel, mud

Lake

Lake currents, waves

Sand, mud

Desert

Wind

Sand, dust

Glacial

Ice

Sand, gravel, mud

Delta

River + waves, tides

Sand, mud

Beach

Waves, tides

Sand, gravel

Shallow shelf

Waves, tides

Sand, mud

Deep sea

Ocean currents, settling

Mud

Sedimentary Rock Types


Relative abundance

Sandstone
and conglomerate
~11%
Limestone and
dolomite
~13%

Siltstone, mud
and shale
~75%

Sedimentary Environments
Glacier
Lake

Tidal flat
Desert
River
Delta

Con
tine
ntal

Organic reef
Continental shelf
Beach
Continental slope

Deep sea

mar
gin

Marine Deposits
Old
mountain
belt

Coastal
plain

Alluvial
plain sands
Beach
sands

Shallow water
marine sands

Sea level

Slope, slumps
and landslides

Continental
shelf
Continental
slope

Submarine
fan turbidites

Continental rise

Abyssal plain
turbidites
Abyssal plain

Beach Profile
Surf
zone

Swash
zone

High-tide
shoreline

Dune
belt

Low-tide
shoreline

Offshore

Foreshore

Dipping strata

Backshore

River Estuary
Major distributary channel
Salt marsh
Bar
Shallow
bay

ne
Fi

nd
a
s

d
an

t
sil

l ts
i
S

d
an

ys
a
cl

ne
Fi

General structure
of the Mississippi Delta

s
ay
l
c

d
an

s
ud

Turbidity Current
Sediments draped
over edge of slope

Land

Sea level

Effective depth of wave action

Shelf

Clear still water

Turbidity current

Slope

Slumps on slope,
triggered by earthquake,
generate turbidity
currents that flow down
slope to abyssal plain
where they come to rest
Rise
Abyssal plain

Sedimentary sorting
lateral & vertical

Fan Deposition

Example

Alluvial sedimentation

Dune Ripple Formation


Wind
Slip
face
(a) Saltating and rolling grains land
on slip face

(b) Unstable accumulation build up

(c) Accumulation cascades down to


base, advancing the dune

Compression of streamlines
over dune increases velocity

Fossil Dunes
Sediment sorting
Constant wind
force
Constant wind
direction

Major Chemical and Biochemical


Sedimentary Environments
Environment

Agent of Precipitation

Sediments

Carbonate

Shelled organisms, inorganic


precipitation from seawater

Carbonate sands
and muds, reefs

Evaporite

Evaporation of seawater

Gypsum, halite

Deep sea

Shelled organisms

Silica sediment

Swamp

Vegetation

Peat

(reef, bank,
deep sea, etc.)

Limestone
SEM

Foraminiferal ooze

Lagoon

The Origin of Fossil Fuels

Formation of Hydrocarbons
Organic Theory
Sea level

Organic material dies


and falls to the bottom
of seas and lakes

Formation of Hydrocarbons
Organic Theory
Sea level

It forms an
organic-rich
ooze

Formation of Hydrocarbons
Organic Theory
Sea level

The ooze loses oxygen


to form hydrocarbons

Formation of Hydrocarbons
Organic Theory
Sea level

During subsequent compaction,


the hydrocarbons migrate through
nearby porous rocks into the
reservoir

Hydrocarbon Maturation
0
1

Hydrocarbon maturity

60
Initial maturity
(zone of oil
generation)

80

Mature & post


mature (high
temperature methane)

165
180

Heavy
hydrocarbons
Light
hydrocarbons
Methane

Oil

115
130

4
5

Biogenic
(early)
methane

Immature

2
3

Max. paleo Hydrocarbon


product
-temp. (C)

Condensate/
wet gas
High
temperature
methane

Migration and Accumulation

Generation, Migration, and


Trapping of Hydrocarbons

Fault
(impermeable)

Oil/water
contact (OWC)
Migration route
Seal

Hydrocarbon
accumulation
in the
reservoir rock
Top of maturity
Source rock

Reservoir
rock

From Source to Reservoir


SOURCE
Rock Types
Shales 65%
Carbonates 21%
Marl 12%
Coal 2%

MIGRATION

Compaction
Aquathermal pressure
Buoyancy
Hydrodynamic regime

RESERVOIR
Rock Types
Porosity
Permeability

Reservoir Traps

Structural Hydrocarbon Traps


Fracture

Oil

Trap
Oil/Gas
Seal Contact

Fracture Basement

Oil / Gas

Gas

Fold Trap

Closure

Oil
Oil/Water
Contact

Sand
Shale

Fault Trap

(modified from Bjorlykke, 1989)

Fold Terminology

Anticline
Syncline

Youngest
rock
Oldest rock

Folding

Example

Anticline

Example

Anza-Borrego, California

Overturned Folds
Example

Faulting (normal faults)

Example

Kabab Canyon, Utah

Faults & Folds

900 m

Example

Chulitna - Terranes / N Wrangellia / Alaska

Stratigraphic Hydrocarbon Traps


Unconformity

Pinch out

Uncomformity

Oil/Gas

Oil/Gas

Channel Pinch Out


Oil/Gas

(modified from Bjorlykke, 1989)

Unconventional Traps
Meteoric
Water

Asphalt Trap

Biodegraded
Oil/Asphalt
Partly
Biodegraded Oil

Water
Hydrodynamic Trap

Hydrostatic
Head

Shale
Water

Oil
(modified from Bjorlykke, 1989)

Transform Fault
rm
sfo
an
Tr
ult
Fa

Trench

Fault
Locus of
earthquake

Lateral sliding of plates

San Andreas Fault, USA

Transform fault
Sliding plate boundary

Diapirism
Faulting

Folding

Salt

Parameters to consider :
Mature SR extension
Reservoirs / Drains Extension
Seal Extension
Processes to consider :
Burial
HC Generation and Migration
Trapping and HC Conservation

HYDROCARBON
KITCHEN

POOLS

1- Present day geological Cross-section

Discussion on present
geometry is of course
essential

Necessary but not sufficient


2- Geological Cross-section at the time of HC generation

but
It is mandatory to
consider the
Trap formation timing
vs the
HC generation timing

Mandatory for the full knowledge of a petroleum system

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