2. Origin of petroleum
Petroleum is derived from the remains of living things which
contains a material called Kerogen.
Before dead organic matter becomes petroleum with time, the
Kerogen matures into an assortment of hydrocarbon molecules
of all sizes and weights.
The light ones being gas and the heavy ones being oil
.
5. Origin continues
Petroleum source rocks are of terrestrial and marine origin
Terrestrial source rocks are deposited in lakes, delta and river basins having
woody plant matter, algae etc. Marine source rocks contain dead planktons, algae,
organic remains etc.
In both the settings, the mixture is buried under conditions of no oxygen. The
Kerogen are classified as type I,II & III as per their origin and are capable of
producing oil or gas or both
7. Kerogen transformation
Under the anaerobic conditions, the Kerogen is transformed into a flammable substance called bitumen
by the action of heat and anaerobic microbes in the sediment and natural catalysts. Most of the bitumen is
eventually cooked into tarry asphalt releasing hydrocarbon molecules (as well as water and carbon
dioxide) out of the source rock as it heats.
Thermal alteration of Kerogen forms crude oil by increasing the carbon contents.
At shallow depths (< 3,000 ft), bacteria actions on organic materials form Biogenic Gas(natural gas).
At great depths (high temperature & overburden), Thermogenic Gas is formed.
Later stages of thermogenesis will form wet gas and condensate.