Anomalous Thermal Maturity of Michigan Basin: New Hypothesis
Karen Rose Cercone, Henry N. Pollack
Almost all Paleozoic strata in the Michigan basin display elevated levels of
organic maturity that cannot be explained by present-day burial depths,
geothermal gradients, or heat flow. Likewise, higher heat flow from the basement
in the past, no matter what the timing, is unsatisfactory as an explanation of
the elevated maturities. Evidence from fission-track dating, shale compaction,
and basin geometry suggests that a significant amount of Carboniferous
overburden has been removed from this region by early Mesozoic erosion. If the
missing strata included thermally resistive carbonaceous mudstones and coals,
the high geothermal gradients which characterize these lithologies would have
elevated the temperature at the base of the Carboniferous section. This "thermal
blanket effect would have affected underlying pre-Carboniferous strata as well,
enhancing the process of organic maturation
throughout the basin late Paleozoic
and early Mesozoic time. Models of organic
maturation
which include as little as
500 m of eroded Carboniferous fluvial-deltaic mudstones, carbonaceous mudstones,
and coals can explain the anomalous maturity of most strata in the Michigan
basin without postulating any increase in ancient heat flow.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91022©1989 AAPG Annual Convention, April 23-26, 1989, San Antonio, Texas.