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Featured researches published by Bai Guoping.


Journal of Palaeogeography | 2013

Mesozoic lithofacies palaeogeography and petroleum prospectivity in North Carnarvon Basin,Australia

Tao Chongzhi; Bai Guoping; Liu Junlan; Deng Chao; Lu Xiaoxin; Liu Houwu; Wang Dapeng

Abstract The North Carnarvon Basin, which lies in the North West Shelf of Australia, is highly rich in gas resources. As a typical passive marginal basin, it experienced the pre-rifting, early rifting, main rifting, late rifting, post-rifting sagging and passive margin stages. The basin was mainly filled with thick Mesozoic-Cenozoic sediments, of which the Mesozoic hosts the principal source, reservoir and seal intervals. Mesozoic palaeogeography has an important control on the oil and gas distribution. Triassic gas-prone source rocks of deltaic origin determine the high endowment of natural gases in the North Carnarvon Basin. The more restricted distribution of oil accumulations is controlled by oil source rocks in the Upper Jurassic Dingo Claystone. The Muderong Shale deposited in the Early Cretaceous marine transgression provides the effective regional seal for the underlying oil and gas reservoirs.


Energy Exploration & Exploitation | 2012

Phase states of hydrocarbons in Chinese marine carbonate strata and controlling factors for their formation

Jin Zhijun; Liu Quanyou; Qiu Nansheng; Ding Feng; Bai Guoping

Chinese marine strata were mainly deposited before the Mesozoic. In the Tarim, Sichuan and Ordos Basins, the marine source rocks are made of sapropelic dark shale, and calcareous shale, and they contain type II kerogen. Because of different burial and geothermal histories, the three basins exhibit different hydrocarbon generation histories and preservation status. In the Tarim Basin, both oil and gas exist, but the Sichuan and Ordos Basins host mainly gas. The Tarim Basin experienced a high heat flow history in the Early Paleozoic. For instance, heat flow in the Late Cambrian varied between 65–75 mW/m2, but it declined thereafter and averages 43.5mW/m2 in the current time. Thus, the basin is a “warm to cold basin”. The Sichuan Basin experienced an increasing heat flow through the Early Paleozoic to Early Permian, and peaked in the latest Early Permian with heat flows of 71–77 mW/m2. Then, the heat flow declined stepwise to the current value of 53.2 mW/m2. Thus, it is a generally a high heat flow “warm basin”. The Ordos Basin has a low heat flow for most of its history (45–55 mW/m2), but experienced a heating event in the Cretaceous, with the heat flow rising to 70–80 mW/m2. Thus, this basin is a “cold to warm basin”. The Tarim Basin experienced three events of hydrocarbon accumulations. Oil accumulation formed in the late stage of Caledonian Orogeny. The generation and accumulation of oil continued in the Northern and Central Tarim (Tabei and Tazhong) till the late Hercynian Orogeny, during which, the accumulated oil cracked into gas in the Hetianhe area and Eastern Tarim (Tadong). In the Himalaya Orogeny, oil cracking occurred in the entire basin, part of the oil in the Tabei and Tazhong areas and most of the oil in the Hetianhe and Tadong areas are converted into gas. In the Sichuan Basin, another triple-episode generation and accumulation history is exhibited. In the Indosinian Orogeny, oil accumulation formed, but in the Yanshanian Orogeny, part of the oil in the eastern Sichuan Basin and most of the oil in the northeastern part was cracked into gas. In the Himalayan Orogeny, oil in the entire basin was converted into gas. The Ordos Basin experienced a double-episode generation and accumulation history, oil accumulation happened in the early Yanshanian stage, and cracked in the late stage. In general, multiple phases of heat flow history and tectonic reworking caused multiple episodes of hydrocarbon generation, oil to gas cracking, and accumulation and reworking. The phases and compositions of oil and gas are mainly controlled by thermal and burial histories, and hardly influenced by kerogen types and source rock types.


Petroleum Science | 2007

Paleozoic composite petroleum system of North Africa: hydrocarbon distribution and main controlling factors

Bai Guoping; Zheng Lei

North Africa, which is one of the main oil and gas producing regions in the world, is best known for its sub-salt Paleozoic-Triassic reservoirs and Paleozoic source rocks. Hydrocarbon abundance varies greatly from one structural domain to another areally and from one stratigraphic interval to another vertically. Analyses of the essential elements and geological processes of the Paleozoic petroleum system indicate that the distribution of the Lower Silurian shale source rocks, the development of a thick Mesozoic overburden, the presence of the Upper Triassic-Lower Jurassic evaporite seal are the most important factors governing the distribution of the Paleozoic-sourced hydrocarbons in North Africa. The Mesozoic sequence plays a critical role for hydrocarbons to accumulate by enabling the maturation of the Paleozoic source rocks during the Mesozoic-Paleogene times and preserving the accumulated hydrocarbons. Basins and surrounding uplifts, particularly the latter, with a thick Mesozoic sequence and a regional evaporite seal generally have abundant hydrocarbons. Basins where only a thin Mesozoic overburden was developed tend to have a very poor to moderate hydrocarbon prospectivity.


Petroleum Science | 2007

Main Controls on Hydrocarbon Accumulation in the Paleozoic in Central Saudi Arabia

Bai Guoping

Saudi Arabia is renown for its rich oil and gas resources with the bulk of the reserves reservoired in the Mesozoic. However, the discovery of Paleozoic fields in the late 1980s has encouraged further exploration in the Paleozoic. This paper reviews the salient features of the Paleozoic petroleum geology in central Saudi Arabia and discusses the main factors controlling hydrocarbon accumulation in the Paleozoic. The Lower Silurian Qusaiba hot shale is the principal source rock for the hydrocarbons discovered in the Ordovician to Permian reservoirs. Of them, the Permo-Carboniferous Unayzah and Upper Ordovician Sarah Formations have the best exploration potential. The key factors controlling hydrocarbon accumulation in the Unayzah Formation are migration pathways and reservoir petrophysics. The key factors controlling hydrocarbon accumulation in the Sarah Formation are reservoir petrophysics and the development of structural traps.


Acta Geologica Sinica-english Edition | 2010

Quantitative Assessment of Hydrocarbon Expulsion of Petroleum Systems in the Niuzhuang Sag, Bohai Bay Basin, East China

Pang Xiongqi; Li Sumei; Jin Zhijun; Bai Guoping


Acta Geologica Sinica-english Edition | 2007

Diagenesis and Fluid Flow History in Sandstones of the Upper Permian Black Jack Formation, Gunnedah Basin, Eastern Australia

Bai Guoping; J Keene


Journal of Palaeogeography | 2006

Distribution patterns of giant carbonate fields in the world

Bai Guoping


Acta Geologica Sinica-english Edition | 2010

Tectonic Evolution of the Junggar Foreland Basin in the Late Carboniferous‐Permian

Chen Shuping; Zhang Yiwei; Tang Liangjie; Bai Guoping


Gudili Xuebao | 2016

Wireline log response-based recognition and evaluation of diagenetic facies in tight sandstone reservoirs: A case study of the Member 3 of Paleogene Shahejie Formation in Raoyang sag of Jizhong Depression

Zhang Kaixun; Bai Guoping; Wang Quan; Niu Xinjie; Li Qiuwei; Lu Xiaoxin


Journal of China University of Petroleum | 2007

A preliminary study of main control factors on oil and gas distribution in Persian Gulf Basin

Bai Guoping

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Wang Dapeng

China University of Petroleum

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Deng Chao

China University of Petroleum

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Li Sumei

China University of Petroleum

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Liu Junlan

China University of Petroleum

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Tao Chongzhi

China University of Petroleum

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Chen Shuping

China University of Petroleum

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Pang Xiongqi

University of Pennsylvania

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