--> The Bakken Formation Within the Northern Part of the Williston Basin: A Comprehensive and Integrated Reassessment of Organic Matter Content, Origin, Distribution and Hydrocarbon Potential

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The Bakken Formation Within the Northern Part of the Williston Basin: A Comprehensive and Integrated Reassessment of Organic Matter Content, Origin, Distribution and Hydrocarbon Potential

Abstract

This paper presents the findings of a integrated and comprehensive assessment of the oil generative potential for the Lower and Upper Bakken within the northern portion of the Williston Basin, using high resolution sampling of core from over 40 boreholes, analyses show the total organic carbon (wt% TOC) content for the Bakken Formation is not constant throughout any cored depth interval, but exhibits an extreme degree of variability both with depth and across northern portion of the Williston Basin. This is replicated by a variation in S1, S2, Tmax and HI across the study area and mirrored by the variation in yield of extractable organic matter (EOM), saturate, aromatic and NSO compounds as well as total sulphur, g.c.-fingerprint analysis, Pr/Ph ratios, short-chain/long-chain ratios, and the abundance and distribution in biomarkers. The dominant type of organic matter is a Type II fluorescing Bituminite, but relatively high amounts of total sulphur and organic sulphur within the kerogen indicate the localized presence of Type IIs, with implications for the early generation of hydrocarbon at low levels of thermal maturity. The presence of sulphur is supported by the relatively high abundance of aryl isoprenoids. A depth-wise and basin-wide variation in transition metal concentration, noteably Molybdium, Chromium, Nickel and Vanadium, key molecular ‘fingerprints’ and biomarkers within the Upper and Lower Bakken shales, indicate existence of stratified water column characterized by photic-zone anoxia during deposition. The presence of cyanobacteria, green sulfur bacteria (e.g., Chlorobiaceae) and the presence of anaerobic Bacterivorous Ciliates during the deposition of the Upper and Lower Bakken, suggest that the amorphous organic matter within the Bakken (identified as Bituminite) represents the bacterial reworking of primary organic matter by Bacterivorous Ciliates. Some of the broader implication from this study includes support for a paleo-water depth during the Upper and Lower Bakken that is at least 100m a mechanism and process that explains the origin and composition of the amorphous kerogen, an explanation for the presence of high amounts of sulphur and pyrite within the shale, the variation in organic matter content, variation in biomarker distribution and presents a challenge to the established notion that precursor organic matter is extensively reworked, and hence transformed into amorphous kerogen, exclusively within the sediment.