Geology of bitumen and heavy oil: An overview

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.petrol.2016.11.025Get rights and content

Abstract

On a world-wide basis there is an estimated 5.6 trillion barrels of bitumen and heavy-oil resources which occur in over 70 different countries, with most of the heavy-oil in Venezuela and most of the bitumen in Canada. The most common plate-tectonic settings in which the heavy-oil and bitumen are found are in continental multi-cyclic marginal basins and in continental rift basins.

Heavy oil and bitumen resources are largely a result of natural degradation of formerly conventional oil accumulations. The natural degradation for most is biologic in origin, with the result that the majority of heavy-oil and bitumen deposits is characteristically in younger rocks (Cretaceous and younger) and at shallow depths (usually <200 m, up to 2000 m maximum). At a deposit-scale it is necessary for communication to have been established between the surface and subsurface to facilitate the biologic contamination of the pre-existing light petroleum reservoirs. Communication is through loss of caprock integrity, associated with major erosion (creation of unconformities), faulting, fracturing; and, for carbonate host-rocks, karstification. Two cases are discussed to illustrate these geologic processes: 1) the influence of the sub-Cretaceous unconformity on the Cretaceous oil-sands in the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin; and, 2) the influence of faulting, fracturing and karstification on the Grosmont carbonate-bitumen deposit of northeastern Alberta.

Keywords

Geology overview
Bitumen
Heavy oil

Cited by (0)

View Abstract