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Journal ArticleDOI

Anoxic Environments and Oil Source Bed Genesis

Demaison Gerard J, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1980 - 
- Vol. 64, Iss: 8, pp 1179-1209
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TLDR
The anoxic aquatic environment is a mass of water so depleted in oxygen that virtually all aerobic biologic activity has ceased as discussed by the authors, where the demand for oxygen in the water column exceeds the supply.
Abstract
The anoxic aquatic environment is a mass of water so depleted in oxygen that virtually all aerobic biologic activity has ceased. Anoxic conditions occur where the demand for oxygen in the water column exceeds the supply. Oxygen demand relates to surface biologic productivity, whereas oxygen supply largely depends on water circulation, which is governed by global climatic patterns and the Coriolis force. Organic matter in sediments below anoxic water is commonly more abundant and more lipid-rich than under oxygenated water mainly because of the absence of benthonic scavenging. The specific cause for preferential lipid enrichment probably relates to the biochemistry of anaerobic bacterial activity. Geochemical-sedimentologic evidence suggests that potential oil source beds are and have been deposited in the geologic past in four main anoxic settings as follows. 1. Large anoxic lakes: Permanent stratification promotes development of anoxic bottom water, particularly in large lakes which are not subject to seasonal overturn, such as Lake Tanganyika. Warm equable climatic conditions favor lacustrine anoxia and nonmarine oil source bed deposition. Conversely, lakes in temperate climates tend to be well oxygenated. 2. Anoxic silled basins: Only those landlocked silled basins with positive water balance tend to become anoxic. Typical are the Baltic and Black Seas. In arid-region seas (Red and Mediterranean Seas), evaporation exceeds river inflow, causing negative water balance and well-oxygenated bottom waters. Anoxic conditions in silled basins on oceanic shelves also depend upon overall climatic and water-circulation patterns. Silled basins should be prone to oil source bed deposition at times of worldwide transgression, both at high and low paleolatitudes. Silled-basin geometry, however, does not automatically imply the presence of oil source beds. 3. Anoxic layers caused by upwelling: These develop only when the oxygen supply in deep water cannot match demand owing to high surface biologic productivity. Examples are the Benguela Current and Peru coastal upwelling. No systematic correlation exists between upwelling and anoxic conditions because deep oxygen supply is often sufficient to match strongest demand. Oil source beds and phosphorites resulting from upwelling are present preferentially at low paleolatitudes and at times of worldwide transgression. 4. Open-ocean anoxic layers: These are present in the oxygen-minimum layers of the northeastern Pacific and northern Indian Oceans, far from deep, oxygenated polar water sources. They are analogous, on a reduced scale, to worldwide "oceanic anoxic events" which occurred at global climatic warmups and major transgressions, as in Late Jurassic and middle Cretaceous times. Known marine oil source bed systems are not randomly distributed in time but tend to coincide with periods of worldwide transgression and oceanic anoxia. Geochemistry, assisted by paleogeography, can greatly help petroleum exploration by identifying paleoanoxic events and therefore widespread oil source bed systems in the stratigraphic record. Recognition of the proposed anoxic models in ancient sedimentary basins should help in regional stratigraphic mapping of oil shale and oil source beds.

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Citations
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38. facies and diagenesis of organic matter in sediments from the brazil basin and the rio grande rise, deep sea drilling project leg 72

TL;DR: The amount, type, and thermal maturation of organic matter in sediments from two DSDP holes in the South Atlantic (Leg 72) were investigated in this article, where isolated kerogens were studied by microscopy, and nonaromatic hydrocarbons were characterized by capillary gas chromatography.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tectonic controls on lacustrine source rock occurrence in the Huizhou Sag, Pearl River Mouth Basin, China

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study the factors controlling lacustrine source rock deposition in order to predict potential source rocks and discover hydrocarbon reserves, and they find that tectonic controls on source rock formation have been studied extensively.
Journal Article

Source Rock Prediction Value: world provinces during Late Jurassic-earliest Cretaceous times and position of West Carpathians in SRPV prediction

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focused on three major processes which control the organic richness in a specific paleogeographic, climatic and tectonic setting: biologic productivity, background sedimentation rates with non-dilution of organic richness by clastic sedimentation and preservation of organic matter.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydrocarbon generation potential, geochemical characteristics, and accumulation contribution of coal-bearing source rocks in the Xihu Sag, East China Sea Shelf Basin

TL;DR: In this paper , coal has the highest organic matter abundance, followed by carbonaceous mudstone and mudstone, and the higher phytoplankton contribution to the mudstones is verified by the higher liptinite content.
Book ChapterDOI

Depositional and Diagenetic C-S-Fe Signatures and the Potential of Shales to Generate Metal-Rich Fluids

Abstract: The potential of shales to react with dissolved sulfides introduced during late diagenesis or catagenesis is constrained initially by source area effects (which dictate total iron content) and is subsequently diminished by the removal of iron to form pyrite in early diagenetic sulfate reduction. The efficiency of iron removal during sulfate reduction can be measured by the degree of pyritization (DOP), which represents the ratio of pyrite Fe to pyrite Fe plus HCl-soluble Fe. Acid extraction conditions are chosen such that iron mineral reactivity towards HC1 is similar to that towards H2S during early diagenesis. DOP values so defined demonstrate that the efficiency of reactive iron removal is mainly dependent on depositional environment. Reactive iron removal in marine shales is minimized where deposition occurs from fully oxygenated bottom waters. Here, low DOP values (less than 0.4) result because organic carbon, remaining after benthic activity, is poorly metabolized by sulfatereducing bacteria, and hence pyrite formation is limited. Still lower DOP values may occur where shales have been rapidly deposited and reworked. In freshwater environments low DOP values also result because the availability of dissolved sulfate limits sulfate reduction and hence also pyrite formation.
References
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Book

Petroleum Formation and Occurrence

TL;DR: The early transformation of organic matter from organisms to geochemical fossils and Kerogen has been studied in the literature as mentioned in this paper, with a focus on the migration and accumulation of oil and gas.
Book

Petroleum Geochemistry and Geology

John M. Hunt
TL;DR: The development of petroleum geochemistry and geology carbon and origin of life petroleum and its products how oil forms -natural hydrocarbons how oil form -generated hydrocarbon models petroleum generation the origin of natural gas migration and accumulation abnormal pressures the source rock coals, shales, and other terrestrial source rocks petroleum in the reservoir seeps and surface prospecting a geochemical program for petroleum exploration crude oil correlation prospect evaluation as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organic geochemical indicators of palaeoenvironmental conditions of sedimentation

TL;DR: In this article, the role of oxic and anoxic sedimentary environments is evaluated using a combination of geochemical parameters such as lipid composition, sulphur and organic pigments.
Journal Article

Cretaceous oceanic anoxic events: causes and consequences

TL;DR: In this article, an interpretation of these events as the result of the interplay of two major geologic and climatic factors is given, namely, the Late Cretaceous transgression which increased the area and volume of shallow epicontinental and marginal seas and was accompanied by an increase in the production of organic carbon; and the existence of an equable global climate which reduced the supply of cold oxygenated bottom water to the world ocean.
Book ChapterDOI

The Origin and Distribution of Methane in Marine Sediments

TL;DR: Methane has been detected in several cores of rapidly deposited (> 50 m/my) deep sea sediments as discussed by the authors, and the methane originates predominantly from bacterial reduction of CO2, as indicated by complimentary changes with depth in the amount and isotopic composition of redox-linked pore water constituents.