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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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Sedimentary organic matter preservation: an assessment and speculative synthesis

TL;DR: For example, in a recent paper as discussed by the authors, the authors investigated the mechanisms governing sedimentary organic matter preservation in marine sediments and found that organic preservation in the marine environment is < 0.5% efficient, and that the factors which directly determine preservation vary with depositional regime, but have in common a critical interaction between organic and inorganic materials over locally variable time scales.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organic geochemical proxies of paleoceanographic, paleolimnologic, and paleoclimatic processes

TL;DR: In this article, the organic matter content of sediments is inferred from bulk properties such as elemental compositions, carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratios, Rock-Eval pyrolysis data, and organic petrography.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geochemistry of Recent oxic and anoxic marine sediments: Implications for the geological record

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the distribution of minor and trace elements in marine sediments and provided forensic tools for determining the redox conditions of the bottom waters at the time of deposition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geochemistry of oceanic anoxic events

TL;DR: In the case of the Cenomanian-Turonian and early Aptian OAEs, a longer-term trend to less radiogenic values was observed as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship Between Petroleum Composition and Depositional Environment of Petroleum Source Rocks

TL;DR: In this paper, a novel parameter based on the presence of C30 steranes in the oil was found to be a definitive indication of a contribution to the source from marine-derived organic matter, which can be used to gauge relative amounts of higher plant input to oils within a given basin.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Paleoenvironment and Petroleum Potential of Mid-Cretaceous Black Shales in Atlantic Basins: ABSTRACT

TL;DR: In this paper, geochemical logs from the Deep Sea Drilling Project in the Atlantic Ocean have been used to identify three main types of organic material: marine planktonic, terrestrial higher plants, moderately degraded and residual organic matter, either oxidized in subaerial environments and/or recycled from older sediments.