New Evidences of Fluid Inclusions from Wufeng Formation Reveal Shale Gas Accumulation and Leakage Histories in Northern Guizhou, Southwestern China

Author:

Wang Yisong12ORCID,Huang Yahao3,Shi Fulun12,Lin Ruiqin12,Du Wei12,Zhang Daquan12,Chen Yi12,Feng Xia12ORCID,Zhang Ziya4,Yang Peng5

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Unconventional Natural Gas Evaluation and Development in Complex Tectonic Areas, Ministry of Natural Resources 1 , Guiyang, 550004 , China

2. Guizhou Engineering Research Institute of Oil & Gas Exploration and Development 2 , Guiyang, 550004 , China

3. Hubei Key Laboratory of Petroleum Geochemistry and Environment, Yangtze University 3 , Wuhan, 430100 , China

4. Unconventional Petroleum Research Institute, China University of Petroleum−Beijing 4 , Beijing, 102249 , China

5. State Key Laboratory of Continental Dynamics, Department of Geology, Northwest University 5 , Xi’an, 710069 , China

Abstract

Abstract Shale gas accumulation and leakage histories are significant for evaluating the prospects of hydrocarbon exploration. The Wufeng Formation in northern Guizhou is a potential target for shale gas exploration and development. This work selected a typical Well YH1 to conduct detailed fluid inclusion analyses in the Wufeng Formation. We integrated the inclusion results with systematic core description, thin-section microscopic observation, laser Raman spectroscopy, microscopic temperature measurement, and burial–thermal history to reveal shale gas accumulation and leakage histories in northern Guizhou. The results show that the source rocks of the Wufeng Formation occurred in oil generation since the Permian and entered the stage of natural gas generation at the end of the Late Triassic. During the Early Jurassic and Early Cretaceous, shale gas accumulated in the Wufeng Formation reservoirs, and the stratigraphical pressure coefficient ranged from 1.47 to 1.97. Under the influence of the Yanshan orogeny, northern Guizhou experienced a rapid uplift and exhumation since the end of the Early Cretaceous. Under the influence of this tectonic, the stratigraphical pressure plummeted to the normal level, adversely impacting the accumulated shale gas in reservoirs and resulting in leakage events since the end of the Early Cretaceous. The reservoirs were further destroyed and adjusted, and the gas continued to leak because of a long-term and large-scale uplift and exhumation during the Himalayan orogeny. This work clarified that shale gas accumulation and leakage histories are significant for evaluating petroleum exploration.

Publisher

GeoScienceWorld

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