--> Abstract: The Organic and Isotope Geochemistry of the Permian Greta Coal, Australia, by S. C. George, J. W. Smith, D. R. Jardine, and P. J. Hamilton; #90987 (1993).
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GEORGE, SIMON C., CSIRO Division of Exploration Geoscience, Sydney; JOHN W. SMITH and DANIEL R. JARDINE, School of Chemistry, Macquarie University, Sydney; and P. JOE HAMILTON, CSIRO Division of Exploration Geoscience, Sydney

ABSTRACT: The Organic and Isotope Geochemistry of the Permian Greta Coal, Australia.

Changing environments accompanying invasion by the Permian oceans of regions of land plant deposition are reflected in the organic and isotope geochemistry of the Australian Greta coal. In traversing from the lower (non-marine) to the upper (marine) margins of the Greta Previous HitseamNext Hit (about 7 m thick), the vitrinite reflectance values decrease from 0.66% to 0.54% and the amount of extractable organic matter increases markedly, suggesting that suppression of vitrinite reflectance is occurring in the marine-influenced coal. Widely differing inputs of organic material are suggested by n-alkane distributions.

Aliphatic hydrocarbon fractions from the bottom of the Previous HitseamNext Hit contain high molecular weight n-alkanes with an odd carbon number predominance, typical of a land-plant source, together with abundant hopane and sterane biological markers. These latter compounds become dominant towards the top of the Previous HitseamNext Hit with few n-alkanes remaining, reflecting a greater bacterial contribution due to the marine incursion. However, the distribution of individual hopanes, steranes, methylphenanthrenes and the great bulk of other aromatic compounds vary less markedly through the Previous HitseamTop. The marine transgression is manifested isotopically by the {18}O/{16}O ratio of clays associated with dirt hands in the coal and by the concentration and {34}S content of sulphur species.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90987©1993 AAPG Annual Convention, New Orleans, Louisiana, April 25-28, 1993.