4.7 Article

Oil/gas-source rock correlations in the Dniepr-Donets Basin (Ukraine): New insights into the petroleum system

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 67, Issue -, Pages 720-742

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2015.07.002

Keywords

Source rock; Hydrocarbons; Biomarkers; Stable carbon isotopy; Rudov beds; Paleozoic; Shebelinka

Funding

  1. Shell Ukraine EP

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The Dniepr-Donets Basin (DDB) hosts a multi-source petroleum system with more than 200 oil and gas fields, mainly in Carboniferous clastic rocks. Main aim of the present study was to correlate accumulated hydrocarbons with the most important source rocks and to verify their potential to generate oil and gas. Therefore, molecular and isotopic composition as well as biomarker data obtained from 12 oil and condensate samples and 48 source rock extracts was used together with USGS data for a geological interpretation of hydrocarbon charging history. Within the central DDB, results point to a significant contribution from (Upper) Visean black shales, highly oil-prone as well as mixed oil- and gas-prone Serpukhovian rocks and minor contribution from an additional Tournaisian source. Devonian rocks, an important hydrocarbon source within the Pripyat Trough, have not been identified as a major source within the central DDB. Additional input from Bashkirian to Moscovian (?) (Shebelinka Field) as well as Toumaisian to Lower Visean rocks (e.g. Dovgal Field) with higher contents of terrestrial organic matter is indicated in the SE and NW part, respectively. Whereas oil-source correlation contradicts major hydrocarbon migration in many cases for Tournaisian to Middle Carboniferous reservoir horizons, accumulations within Upper Carboniferous to Permian reservoirs require vertical migration up to 4000 m along faults related to Devonian salt domes. 1-D thermal models indicate hydrocarbon generation during Permo-Carboniferous time. However, generation in coal-bearing Middle Carboniferous horizons in the SE part of the basin may have occurred during the Mesozoic. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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