KARELIAN SHUNGITE-AN INDICATION OF 2.0-GA-OLD METAMORPHOSED OIL-SHALE AND GENERATION OF PETROLEUM: GEOLOGY, LITHOLOGY AND GEOCHEMISTRY

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dc.contributor.author Melezhik V.A.
dc.contributor.author Fallick A.E.
dc.contributor.author Filippov M.M.
dc.contributor.author Larsen O.
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-11T07:43:31Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-11T07:43:31Z
dc.date.issued 1999
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=13306536
dc.identifier.citation Earth-Science Reviews, 1999, , 1, 1-40
dc.identifier.issn 0012-8252
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/22597
dc.description.abstract The ca. 2.0-Ga-old, 600-m-thick upper Zaonezhskaya Formation near Lake Onega, NW Russia, contains unusually high concentrations of Corg (up to 98%), averaging around 25%. The formation contains an estimated 25×1010 tonnes of organic carbon accumulated within an area of 9000 km2. Organic material is represented by shungite, which forms a black, dense, amorphous or nanocrystalline mass consisting of C with traces of N, O, S, and H. Autochthonous shungite occurs as disseminated organic material (0.1–50% Corg) which, when mixed with migrated bitumen (now pyrobitumen), appears as coal-like seams and lenses of semilustrous and semimat layer-shungite rocks (oil shales, 50–75% Corg). The migrated bitumen (originally petroleum), represented by the lustrous vein- and layer-shungite, conformably fills interbedding spaces or cross-cutting joints and usually contains 80–98% Corg. The shungite-bearing rocks of the upper Zaonezhskaya Formation represent one of the most richest accumulations of organic material reported from the Palaeoproterozoic, and one of the geologically earliest stages of petroleum generation. The sediments of the Zaonezhskaya Formation were initially deposited in brackish water in a non-euxinic, lagoonal environment. The high C/S ratio (8–1000) with a zero intercept on the C–S cross-plot indicates that deposition occurred in sulphur-poor water. Intensive synchronous volcanism may have contributed to both the enhanced delivery of nutrients and elevated sedimentation rate, and eventually to the high degree of preservation of organic material. The integrated data suggest that the organic material has a biogenic origin, most likely algal or bacterial. The organic material suffered complex catagenetic and metamorphic alteration which is reflected in: (1) the four-modal distribution of Corg content (with maxima at 5, 30, 65 and 95%); (2) highly variable (−45‰ to −17‰); (3) bimodal distribution of (with maxima at −28 and −39‰); and (4) low H/C ratios (0.005–0.2). Abundant diagenetic carbonates associated with shungite rocks (=−5 to −26‰) and the presence of pyrite ( −22 to +31‰), reflects substantial loss of organic matter via bacterial reduction of sulphate during diagenesis. The shungite rocks are characterised by a further substantial loss (>50%) of biologically produced organic material in the course of thermal maturation and by a depletion in (>10‰). The isotopic composition of carbonate concretions does not indicate the involvement of fermentative diagenesis. Conservative estimates give δ13Corg of −34‰ as the best value of the initial biomass. Lustrous vein- and layer-shungite containing more than 80% Corg are considered to be allochthonous, migrated bitumen (originally petroleum). The semilustrous and semimat layer shungite rocks containing 55–75% Corg represent oil shales with both migrated bitumen (originally petroleum) and autochthonous kerogen residues. The oil source rocks were apparently hosted in the Zaonezhskaya Formation. The generated oil has migrated both vertically and laterally with the highest concentration in cupola structures. The locality at Shunga represents the most significant volume of trapped petroleum from the study area.
dc.subject Palaeoproterozoic en
dc.title KARELIAN SHUNGITE-AN INDICATION OF 2.0-GA-OLD METAMORPHOSED OIL-SHALE AND GENERATION OF PETROLEUM: GEOLOGY, LITHOLOGY AND GEOCHEMISTRY
dc.type Статья
dc.subject.age Precambrian::Proterozoic::Paleoproterozoic en
dc.subject.age Докембрий::Протерозой::Палеопротерозойская ru


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