--> ABSTRACT: Climate Control on Oil Shale Organic Richness - Green River Formation, Piceance Creek Basin, by J. Frederick Sarg, Jufang Feng, and Kati Tanavsuu-Milkeviciene; #90156 (2012)
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Previous HitClimateNext Hit Control on Oil Shale Organic Richness - Green River Formation, Piceance Creek Basin

J. Frederick Sarg, Jufang Feng, and Kati Tanavsuu-Milkeviciene

The Green River Fm. lake deposits (early-middle Eocene) in the Piceance Creek basin are largely composed of kerogen-rich and kerogen-poor mudstones (clay and carbonate). Lake evolution is defined by lake stages: S1-Fresh Lake, S2-Transitional Lake, S3-Highly Fluctuating Lake, S4-Rising Lake, S5-High Lake, and S6-Closing Lake. Lake stages correlate to the early to middle Eocene Previous HitclimateNext Hit optimum. S1 appears to have formed during the warming phase of the Previous HitclimateNext Hit optimum and represent the basin evolution from fresh to saline conditions. The lake changed during S1 from an open lake to a closed lake basin suggesting a change from abundant rainfall and high runoff, to more seasonal and dryer Previous HitclimateNext Hit. Increased seasonality, and flashy runoff began during S2, indicating restricted lake conditions, and peaked during S3, at the maximum of the Previous HitclimateNext Hit optimum, when arid conditions prevailed, and nahcolite and halite are abundant. The ensuing lake level rise (S4) and high lake (S5) occur during climatic cooling, accompanied by increased precipitation. The organic deposition of the Green River oil shale is related to three factors: production, destruction, and dilution. The pattern of organic richness variation suggests a net-productivity-driven organic depositional model modified by variations in dilution related to Previous HitclimateNext Hit. Inorganic geochemistry proxies (P, Al, V/Cr, C13, O18) suggest net productivity plus dilution by siliciclastics and/or evaporites controls the average organic richness variation over the long term lake history. This is evident in the variation between Green River rich-zones (R), expressed here as changes in average oil yield in gal/ton. During S1, stratified conditions first developed, and moderately high net productivity and diminishing detrital dilution occurred as the Previous HitclimateNext Hit dried, resulting in increasing richness (R0-21gal/ton, R1-27gal/ton). High productivity and low dilution peaked in early S2, resulting in very high richness (R2-39gal/ton). Richness then declined as evaporate precipitation increased (R3-25gal/ton). S3 shows decreasing average organic richness from an early high to a minimum at the end of S3, when increased saline mineral dilution occurred at the peak of the Previous HitclimateNext Hit optimum (R4-36gal/ton, R5-21gal/ton). Net productivity increased during subsequent Previous HitclimateTop cooling, with a return to wet conditions (S4, S5). Diminished saline dilution resulted in increasing organic richness (R6-24gal/ton, R7-30gal/ton).

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90156©2012 AAPG Rocky Mountain Section Meeting, Grand Junction, Colorado, 9-12 September 2012