1. The Depth Limit for the Formation and Occurrence of Fossil Fuel Resources.
- Author
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Xiongqi Pang, Chengzao Jia, Kun Zhang, Maowen Li, Youwei Wang, Junwen Peng, Boyuan Li, and Junqing Chen
- Subjects
FOSSIL fuels ,PANGAEA (Supercontinent) ,GAS reservoirs ,PETROLEUM reservoirs ,HUMAN beings ,SAPROPEL ,HUMAN behavior ,KEROGEN - Abstract
Fossil resources are valuable wealth given to human beings by nature. Many mysteries related to them have been revealed such as the origin time and distribution area, but their vertical distribution depth has not been confirmed for people’s different understanding of their origin and the big depth variations from basin to basin. Geological and geochemical data of 13,634 source rock samples from 1,286 exploration wells in six representative petroliferous basins are examined to study their Active Source Rock Depth Limits (ASDL), defined in this study as the maximum burial depth of active source rocks beyond which the source rocks no longer generate or expel hydrocarbons and become inactive, to identify the maximum depth for fossil fuel resources distribution. Theoretically, the maximum depth for the ASDLs of fossil fuel resources ranges from 3,000 m to 16,000 m, while their thermal maturities (Ro) are almost the same with Ro≈3.5±0.5 %. A higher heat flow and more oil-prone kerogen are associated with a shallower ASDL. Active source rocks and the discovered 21.6 billion tons of reserves in six representative basins in China and 52,926 oil and gas reservoirs in the 1,186 basins over the world are found to be distributed above the ASDL, illustrating the universality of such kind of depth limit. The data are deposited in the repository of the PANGAEA database: https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.900865 (Pang et al., 2019). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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