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Hydrocarbon source rock potential and elemental composition of lower Silurian subsurface shales of the eastern Murzuq Basin, southern Libya
ISSN
1873-4073
0264-8172
Date Issued
2013
Author(s)
Howard, James P.
Strogen, Dominic
Kaye, Matthew D.
Abutarruma, Yousef
Elgadry, Mohamed
Thusu, Bindra
Whitham, Andrew G.
DOI
10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2013.08.010
Abstract
A shallow borehole was drilled in lower Silurian (Rhuddanian lower Aeronian) Tanezzuft Formation siliciclastic sediments at the eastern margin of the Murzuq Basin. Shale samples were retrieved from the borehole to study their source rock potential and trace element geochemical composition. Thirty shale samples analysed from borehole CDEG-2a reveal three geochemically distinct intervals. Shales from the top (23-38 m) interval are weathered and have negligible organic content. Shales from the middle (38-42 m) interval have moderate to good organic richness (0.6-1.7 wt.% TOC) with Hydrogen Index (HI) values up to 443 mg S2/g TOC. Shales from the bottom (42-51 m) interval have poor to moderate organic richness (0.07-0.8 wt.% TOC) with HI values up to 277 mg S2/g TOC. All samples have limited source rock potential and are immature to early mature for hydrocarbon generation. It is unlikely that they have ever been buried deeper than similar to 2 km. Low TOC values (< 2 wt.%) together with low concentrations of uranium (< 10 ppm) indicate the absence of organic-rich black shale ('hot shale') source rocks in the studied interval. Inorganic geochemical redox proxies (Ce-anomaly, authigenic U, Th/U, V/Cr, Ni/Co, and V/Sc) indicate that the lower Silurian Tanezzuft Formation shales from borehole CDEG-2a were deposited under oxic bottom waters, explaining their relatively low TOC values. Deposition took place in a shallow marine environment, in a proximal position with regard to an early Silurian palaeo-shoreline. This combined Rock-Eval pyrolysis and whole-rock geochemical study provides new insights into the Silurian source rock distribution and hydrocarbon prospectivity in central North Africa. (c) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.