Origin, Charging History, and Migration–Accumulation Patterns of Crude Oils in the Eocene Dainan Formation, Southeastern Gaoyou Sag, Subei Basin
Juan Zhang, Wenting Liao, Lixin Fan, Yuezhe Li, Xiangdong YinDeep lacustrine rift basins present persistent challenges in hydrocarbon provenance determination, charging-history reconstruction, and migration pathway prediction within heterogeneous deep reservoirs. This study applies an integrated approach combining biomarker and light-hydrocarbon geochemistry, fluid-inclusion microthermometry, and two-dimensional migration modelling to the deep Eocene Dainan Formation in the southeastern Gaoyou Sag, Subei Basin. Based on 20 analytical entries from Dainan oils/reservoir samples and Funing Formation source-rock extracts, the results indicate mixed contributions from the E1f2 and E1f4 source intervals rather than a single-source origin. Maturity parameters place most oils within the early- to main-oil window, while hydrocarbon inclusions with dominantly blue fluorescence and homogenization temperatures of 85–110 °C are consistent with a dominant Sanduo-period charging episode. Integrated migration modelling identifies two accumulation styles: a northern fault-slope migration system and a southern Zhenwu fault-conduit system, with effective accumulation favoured by the coupling of active faults and connected sand bodies. The established genetic model offers a transferable framework for derisking exploration in analogous deep lacustrine rift basins.