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BACKGROUND: FORMATION AND CLASSIFICATION OF MINERAL DEPOSITS Systematic Application of GIS in Mineral Exploration Knowledge-base database Conceptual models Processing Mineralization processes Predictor maps Mappable exploration criteria Overlay Spatial proxies MODEL Favorability map Validation MINERAL POTENTIAL MAP Garbage In, Garbage Out Good Data In, Good Resource Appraisal Out Geology Geophysics Remote Sensing Geochemistry Geology Geophysics Remote Sensing Geochemistry GIS GIS Analyse / Combine Analyse / Combine Mineral potential maps Mineral potential maps SOME TERMS Magmatic - Related to magma • A complex mixture of molten or (semi-molten) rock, volatiles and solids that is found beneath the surface of the Earth. • Temperatures are in the range 700 °C to 1300 °C, but very rare carbonatite melts may be as cool as 600 °C, and komatiite melts may have been as hot as 1600 °C. • most are silicate mixtures . • forms in high temperature, low pressure environments within several kilometers of the Earth's surface. • often collects in magma chambers that may feed a volcano or turn into a pluton. SOME TERMS Hydrothermal : related to hydrothermal fluids and their circulation - Hydrothermal fluids are hot (50 to >500 C) aqueous solutions containing solutes that are precipitated as the solutions change their physical and chemical properties over space and time. - Source of water in hydrothermal fluids: •Sea water • Meteoric •Connate •Metamorphic •Juvenile - Source of heat • Intrusion of magma into the crust • Radioactive heat generated by cooled masses of magma • Heat from the mantle Hydrothermal circulation, particularly in the deep crust, is a primary cause of mineral deposit formation and a cornerstone of most theories on ore genesis. FUMNDAMENTAL PROCESSES OF FORMATION OF ECONOMIC MINERAL DEPOSITS PRIMARY PROCESSES • MAGMATISM • SEDIMENTARY (includes biological) • HYDROTHERMAL • COMBINATIONS OF ABOVE SECONDARY PROCESSES •MECHANICAL CONCENTRATION • RESIDUAL CONCENTRATION CLASSIFICATION OF ECONOMIC MINERAL DEPOSITS In order to more readily study mineral deposits and explore for them more effectively, it is helpful to first subdivide them into categories. This subdivision, or classification, can be based on a number of criteria, such as • minerals or metals contained, • the shape or size of the deposit, • host rocks (the rocks which enclose or contain the deposit) or • the genesis of the deposit (the geological processes which combined to form the deposit). It is useful to define a small number of terms used in the classification which have a genetic connotation. CLASSIFICATION OF ECONOMIC MINERAL DEPOSITS • MAGMATIC • SEDIMENTARY • HYDROTHERMAL • MAGMATIC HYDROTHERMAL • SEDIMENTARY HYDROTHERMAL • MECHANICAL CONCENTRATION (Gold placers, Tin) • RESIDUAL CONCENTRATION (Bauxite deposits) CLASSIFICATION OF ECONOMIC MINERAL DEPOSITS MAGMATIC Magmatic Deposits are so named because they are genetically linked with the evolution of magmas emplaced into the crust (either continental or oceanic) and are spatially found within rock types derived from the crystallization of such magmas. The most important magmatic deposits are restricted to mafia and ultramafic rocks which represent the crystallization products of basaltic or ultramafic liquids. These deposit types include: •Disseminated (e.g., diamond in ultrapotassic rocks called kimerlites) • Early crystallizing mineral segregation (e.g., Cr, Pt deposits) • Immiscible liquid segregation (Ni deposits) • Residual liquid injection (Pegmatite minerals, feldspars, mica, quartz) CLASSIFICATION OF ECONOMIC MINERAL DEPOSITS SEDIMENTARY DEPOSITS Deposits formed by (bio-)sedimentary processes, that is, deposition of sediments in basins. The term sedimentary mineral deposit is restricted to chemical sedimentation, where minerals containing valuable substances are precipitated directly out of water. Examples: Evaporite Deposits - Evaporation of lake water or sea water results in the loss of water and thus concentrates dissolved substances in the remaining water. When the water becomes saturated in such dissolved substance they precipitate from the water. Deposits of halite (table salt), gypsum (used in plaster and wall board), borax (used in soap), and sylvite (potassium chloride, from which potassium is extracted to use in fertilizers) result from this process. Iron Formations - These deposits are of iron rich chert and a number of other iron bearing minerals that were deposited in basins within continental crust during the Early Proterozoic (2.4 billion years or older), related to great oxygenation event. CLASSIFICATION OF ECONOMIC MINERAL DEPOSITS HYDROTHERMAL These deposits form by precipitation of metals from hydrothermal fluids generated in a variety of environments Example: Orogenic Gold Deposits (e.g., Kolar, Kalgoorlie) CLASSIFICATION OF ECONOMIC MINERAL DEPOSITS MAGMATIC – HYDROTHERMAL Deposits formed by precipitation of metals from hydrothermal fluids related to magmatic activity. • Porphyry deposits (e.g., porphyry copper deposits) are associated with porphyritic intrusive rocks and the fluids that accompany them during the transition and cooling from magma to rock. Circulating surface water or underground fluids may interact with the plutonic fluids. • Volcanogenic massive sulfide (e.g., VMS deposits – Zn and Pb deposits) are a type of metal sulfide ore deposit, mainly Cu-Zn-Pb, which are associated with and created by volcanic-associated hydrothermal events in submarine environments. CLASSIFICATION OF ECONOMIC MINERAL DEPOSITS SEDIMENTARY HYDROTHERMAL These deposits form by precipitation of metals from fluids generated in sedimentary environments. Example: SEDEX Deposits (e.g., Pb-Zn deposits of Rajasthan) CLASSIFICATION OF ECONOMIC MINERAL DEPOSITS SECONDARY DEPOSITS: Formed by concentration of pre-existing deposits •MECHANICAL CONCENTRATION • RESIDUAL CONCENTRATION FORMATION OF MINERAL DEPOSITS COMPONENTS 1. Energy 2. Ligand 3. Source 4. Transport 5. Trap 6. Outflow Mineral System INGREDIENTS (≤ 500 km) Metal source Energy (Driving Force) Ligand source Deposit Halo (≤ 10 km) Deposit (≤ 5 km) Transporting fluid Deposit Model I Deposit Model II Deposit Model III No Deposits Trap Region Residual Fluid Discharge FORMATION OF MINERAL DEPOSITS FROM: OLIVER KREUZER GOLD DEPOSIT FORMATION (From David Groves) Dolerite TRAP Mid Greenschist Sedimentary Sequence Volcanic Rock FLUID PATHWAY Amphibolite Metamorphic Fluid Granulite Distal Magmatic Fluid Granite II SOURCE Metamorphic Fluid Granite I Fluid from Subcreted Oceanic Crust Orogenic gold deposits • Close to trans-lithospheric structures (vertically extensive plumbing systems for hydrothermal fluids) • Related to accretionary terranes (collisional plate boundaries) • Temperature of formation – 200-400 C • Major deposits form close to: – – – – – Fault deflections Dilational jogs Fault intersections Regions of low mean stress and high fluid flow (permeable regions) Greenschist facies metamorphism (low-grade metamorphism, low temperature-pressure conditions) Source of fluids and metals FLUID SOURCES – Devolatilization: • Magmatic devolatilization – magmatic underplating by mantle-derived magma – Devolatilization of individual batches of magma • Metamorphic devolatilization – Mantle degassing (CH4, CO2) METAL SOURCES - Crustal rocks LEGEND SOURCES – Crustal sulfur/sulfate deposits Leaching of Gold in Source Areas By hydrothermal fluids that contain suitable ligands for complexing gold as Au(HS)2– , HAu(HS)20 and Au(HS)0 • Hydrothermal fluids are: – aqueous (H2O)-CO2-CH4 – dilute – carbonic – having low salinity (<3 Wt% NaCl) – Source rocks – typically crustal rocks (granites) –Low Cl but high S indicating that the fluids are generated in crust with low Cl (~200 ppm) but high S (~1 %) – S isotope ranges (0 to +9 ‰) consistent with magmatic Sulphur, desulfidation or dissolution of magmatic sulfides or average crustal sulphur. Alteration • High Au (> 1 PPM) and Ag; Au/Ag ≈ 5 • Hydrolysis of feldspars, Fe, Mg, Ca silicates (muscovite/paragonite-chlorite+/-Albite/K-Felspars) • Carbonization of minerals (Ca, Mg,Fe carbonates) • Sulfidation of Fe-silicates and oxides to sulfides (pyrite etc) • Enrichment of semi-metals (K, Rb, Ba, Cs, As, Sb) and volatiles (H2O, CO2, CH4, H2S) • Depletion of base and transition metals (Zn, Cu, Pb) Transportation of Gold Gold is transported in the form of sulfide complex Au(HS)2– , HAu(HS)20 or Au(HS)0 Low Cl and high S in hydrothermal fluids account for high Au and low Zn/Pb in hydrothermal solutions Transportation pathways – permeable structures such as faults, shear zones, fold axes focus vast volumes of gold-sulfide bearing fluids into trap areas. Gold trapping – (precipitation) • At the Golden Mile (Kalgoorlie) deposit: • Total Gold – 1300 Tonnes • 150 Km3 volume of fluids in 2 Km3 volume! • That is, the fluid has to be focussed through to a very small part of the crust very efficiently. • Accumulation of fluids followed by catastrophic fracturing! Gold trapping – (precipitation) • Inter-seismic-Seismic events • ductile deformation, pressure solution and dislocation glide • Increase in pore-fluid pressure, accumulation of fluids in pore spaces, slow development of supra-hydrostatic pore-fluid pressures • Co-seismic episode • Supra-hydrostatic pore-fluid pressures trigger seismic episodes • Catastrophic hydraulic fracturing • Massive fluid flow through the fractures Gold trapping – (precipitation) Key precipitation process: -break soluble gold sulfide complexes (Au(HS)-1) How? - Take sulfur out of the system How? - by changing physical conditions - by modifying chemical compositions Gold trapping – (precipitation) Physical mechanism: - Fluid boiling through pressure release - Catastrophic release of volatiles, particularly, SO2 - Removal of sulfur breaks gold sulfide complexes leading to the precipitation of gold - Pressure release could be by seismic pumping or by brittle failure of competent rock Gold trapping – (precipitation) Chemical mechanism: - Gold-sulfide complexes react with iron, forming pyrite and precipitating gold - Rocks such as dolerite, banded iron formations are highly enriched in iron and therefore form good host rocks for trapping gold Sediment-hosted Pb-Zn Deposits Types Clastic Dominated (CD) Mississippi Valley Type (MVT) • Hosted in shale, sandstone, siltstone, or mixed clastic rocks, or occur as carbonate replacement, within a CD sedimentary rock sequence • Occur in passive margins, backarcs and continental rifts, and sag basins. • Hosted by dolostone and limestone in platform carbonate sequences • Form in passive-margin tectonic settings. Tectonic setting of sediment-hosted PbZn deposits in passive margins. Figure 1 SEDEX vs VMS SEDEX and MVT deposits occur within or in the platforms to a thick sedimentary basin and are the results of the migration of basinal saline fluids, whereas VMS deposits occur in submarine volcanicsedimentary regions and are formed from convective hydrothermal fluids which are driven by magmatic fluids from a sub-volcanic intrusion (Goodfellow and Lydon, 2007) . So the key difference is in the origin of the ore-fluids – basinal vs magmatic origin of the fluids. LEAD-ZINC SULFIDE DEPOSITS – SEDEX or Sedimentary Exhalative Deposits PbClx(2-x) + H2S PbS +2H+ + xCl- Continental Rift/sag basins If rifting stops short of sea-floor spreading, then thermally driven subsidence becomes dominant and rift-related strata and structures are blanketed, similar to deposits passive margins. The result is a sag basin which can host CD Tectonic Settings of Sediment Hosted Pb-Zn deposits • Most sediment-hosted Pb-Zn deposits are in strata that were deposited in rift or passivemargin settings. • These settings are related: passive margins form when continental rifts succeed • Rifts • Rifts are fault-bounded elongate troughs, under or near which the entire thickness of the lithosphere has been reduced in extension during their formation. • Coarse, immature clastic sediments are shed off the bounding highlands and deposited in alluvial fans along basin-bounding growth faults. • Sedimentation along the rift axis may either be marine or nonmarine. • Rapid subsidence leads to deep-water environments which favour CD Pb-Zn deposits. A : A single continent is extended asymmetrically. B: Rifting has succeeded, and an ocean has begun to open which is bordered by a young passive margin on both sides. C: The ocean widens. D: Some time later , an arc approaches from the west, consuming the oceanic part of the plate that also includes the continent on the east. E: Arc and passive margin collide and the distal passive margin enters the trench. F: Arc-passive margin collision is nearly complete. Tectonic Settings of Sediment Hosted Pb-Zn deposits continued Continental rifting (Fig. 2A) may or may not proceed all the way to sea-floor spreading. If it does, then the axial valley of a rift evolves into a midoceanic ridge and, over time, the continents on either side drift apart. Passive margins develop on the rifted edges of the two diverging continents (Fig. 2B,C) • Passive Margin Setting • Water depth, distance from shore, sea level, and climate control the character of sediments deposited. • Compositionally mature sandstones and siltstones are typical of shelf environments at high latitudes. • Platform carbonates, the classic assemblage of passive margins, and the eventual host of most MVT deposits, are dominant at low latitudes. • Finer grained and shale equivalents are deposited farther offshore on the slope and rise, the prime site for syngenetic or diagenetic CD Pb-Zn deposition. • Ancient passive margins ended their tenure by colliding with an arc (Fig. 2E, F) SEDEX Deposits Source of fluids and ligands: Sea water? Sedex brines: Highly saline 10-30% TDS, but the normal sea water salinity is 3-5% • How are the salts concentrated and huge amounts of fluids of high salinity are required ??? • Halites are typically absent in SEDEX sequences • Generation of near-saturated brines through evaporation in near isolated basins next to the main sedex basin in carbonate shelf; tropical environment • Gravity-driven influx of these saturated brines in the rift-fill clastics through marginal normal faults, mixing with connate brines as well as sea water would produce large amounts of brines of the required salinity SEDEX Deposits Source of metal: Rift-fill clastic sediments Brines circulate through rift-fill sediments over prolonged periods (~70 my) and leach out metals • Basinal brines can be oxidized (SO4-2 rich) or reduced (H2S rich) • Nature of brines is a function of rift-fill sediments – fluvial-deltaic and shallow marine clastic having high reactive Fe produce oxidized brines; shales/carbonates produce reduced brines • Oxidized brines are preferred • PbClx(2-x) +H2S <==> PbS + 2H+ + xCl• Reactive Fe tends to remove H2S as pyrite – hence clastic sediments rich in Fe are good source of metals SEDEX Deposits Source of driving energy Brines circulate over prolonged periods (~70 my) in the rift-fill clastic sediments – what drives the circulation? • Sag-fill sediments have typically low thermal conductivity as well as low permeability • No dewatering and heat-loss during compaction =>> development of geopressurized hot brines in the rift-fill sediments • Geothermal gradient/proximity to mantle/mafic dykes at depth create thermal gradient =>> generation of convectional currents SEDEX Deposits Transportation pathways to the traps for fluids Normal rift faults reactivated Breaching of sag-fill cap (aquitard) and gushing of geopressurized brines as exhalations on the sea floor SEDEX Deposits Precipitation of metals: Chemical Traps PbClx(2-x) + H2S PbS +2H+ + xCl- • A column H2S rich anoxic waters required near the sea-floor SEDEX Deposits Why no SEDEX deposits prior to 1.85 Ga??? • A column H2S rich anoxic waters required near the sea-floor Why no SEDEX deposits prior to 1.85 Ga??? Great Oxygenation Event • • • • • • • • • The atmosphere and the hydrosphere, were reduced prior to about 2.4 Ga. During the time period from about 2.4 and 1.8 Ga, the atmosphere became progressively oxygenated as the result of the loss of H2 to space and/or the evolution of O2-producing organisms. This led to oxygenation of the hydrosphere by addition of sulfates derived from oxidative weathering of sulfides. The change in oceanic composition was most rapid in shallow marginal seas and shelf environments, which resulted in oxidized, relatively sulfate rich shallow seawater in these basins. Bacteriogenic reduction of sulfate in deep basins was nearly complete, leading to the persistence of deep, anoxic ocean waters perhaps into the Neoproterozoic The presence of abundant Fe2+ in these deep waters would have limited the amount of reduced sulfur, leading, at least prior to ~1.8 Ga, to reduced and relatively sulfide poor deep seawater. Only after the oceans were scrubbed of Fe2+ during extensive deposition of iron formations between 1.95 and 1.85 Ga would sulfide contents of the deep oceans have increased. The mid-Proterozoic maximum in SEDEX mineralization and the absence of Archean deposits reflect a critical threshold in the accumulation of oceanic sulfate and thus sulfide within anoxic bottom waters and pore fluids—conditions that favored both the production and preservation of sulfide mineralization at or just below the sea floor. Consistent with these evolving global conditions, the appearance of voluminous SEDEX mineralization ca. 1800 Ma coincides generally with the disappearance of banded iron formations—marking the transition from an early iron-dominated ocean to one more strongly influenced by sulfide availability. Nickel deposit formation Magmatic nickel sulfide deposits form due to saturation of nickel-rich, mantle-derived ultramafic magmas with respect to sulfur, which results in formation and segregation of immiscible nickel sulfide liquid. Sub-volcanic staging chambers Shallow sills and dyke complexes Mid-crustal magma chamber Magma plumbing system 30-40 Km Deep level magma chamber CSIRO, Australia Slide • Nickel-rich source magma (ultramafic) • Transportation of the source magma through active pathways • Deposition of nickelsulfide through sulphur saturation Geology of Petroleum Systems Petroleum System - A Definition •A Petroleum System is a dynamic hydrocarbon system that functions in a restricted geologic space and time scale. •A Petroleum System requires timely convergence of geologic events essential to the formation of petroleum deposits. These Include: Mature source rock Hydrocarbon expulsion Hydrocarbon migration Hydrocarbon accumulation Hydrocarbon retention (modified from Demaison and Huizinga, 1994) Background: Geological terminology and concepts Stratigraphic Relationships K J I H G Angular Unconformity C E D Igneous Dike F B A • Background: Geological terminology and concepts - Types of Unconformities Disconformity – An unconformity in which the beds above and below are parallel • Angular Unconformity – An unconformity in which the older bed intersect the younger beds at an angle • Nonconformity – An unconformity in which younger sedimentary rocks overlie older metamorphic or intrusive igneous rocks Correlation • Establishes the age equivalence of rock layers in different areas • Methods: – Similar lithology – Similar stratigraphic section – Index fossils – Fossil assemblages – Radioactive age dating 4 4.6 150 Mesozoic 100 Cretaceous Jurassic 200 Triassic 250 Permian 300 Pennsylvanian Mississippian 350 400 450 Devonian Silurian Ordovician 500 550 600 Cambrian Recent 0 Pleistocene 10 20 Pliocene Miocene 30 Oligocene 40 Eocene 50 60 Paleocene Cenozoic Era 3 Tertiary 50 Paleozoic 1 Millions of years ago Phanerozoic 2 Quaternary 0 Cryptozoic (Precambrian) Billions of years ago 0 Epoch Tertiary period Era Period Millions of years ago Eon Quaternary period Geologic Time Chart Classification of Rocks Rock-forming Source of process material IGNEOUS SEDIMENTARY METAMORPHIC Molten materials in deep crust and upper mantle Weathering and erosion of rocks exposed at surface Rocks under high temperatures and pressures in deep crust Crystallization (Solidification of melt) Sedimentation, burial and lithification Recrystallization due to heat, pressure, or chemically active fluids The Rock Cycle Magma Metamorphic Rock Heat and Pressure Igneous Rock i Sediment a n Sedimentary Rock Weathering, Transportation and Deposition Sedimentary Rock Types • Relative abundance Sandstone and conglomerate ~11% Limestone Carbonate and dolomite ~13% ~13% Siltstone, mud and shale ~75% Average Detrital Mineral Composition of Shale and Sandstone Mineral Composition Shale (%) Sandstone (%) Clay Minerals 60 5 Quartz 30 65 4 10-15 <5 15 3 <1 <3 <1 Feldspar Rock Fragments Carbonate Organic Matter, Hematite, and Other Minerals (modified from Blatt, 1982) The Physical and Chemical Characteristics of Minerals Strongly Influence the Composition of Sedimentary Rocks Quartz Mechanically and Chemically Stable Can Survive Transport and Burial Feldspar Nearly as Hard as Quartz, but Cleavage Lessens Mechanical Stability May be Chemically Unstable in Some Climates and During Burial Calcite Mechanically Unstable During Transport Chemically Unstable in Humid Climates Because of Low Hardness, Cleavage, and Reactivity With Weak Acid Some Common Minerals Oxides Hematite Magnetite Sulfides Pyrite Galena Sphalerite Carbonates Aragonite Calcite Dolomite Fe-Dolomite Ankerite Sulfates Halides Anhydrite Gypsum Halite Sylvite Silicates Non-Ferromagnesian Ferromagnesian (not common in sedimentary rocks) (Common in Sedimentary Rocks) Quartz Muscovite (mica) Feldspars Potassium feldspar (K-spar) Orthoclase Microcline, etc. Plagioclase Albite (Na-rich - common) through Anorthite (Ca-rich - not common) Olivine Pyroxene Augite Amphibole Hornblende Biotite (mica) Red = Sedimentary RockForming Minerals Sandstones: The Four Major Components • Framework – Sand (and Silt) Size Detrital Grains • Matrix – Clay Size Detrital Material • Cement – Material precipitated post-depositionally, during burial. Cements fill pores and replace framework grains • Pores – Voids between above components Sandstone Composition Framework Grains KF = Potassium Feldspar PRF = Plutonic Rock Fragment PRF KF CEMENT P P = Pore Potassium Feldspar is Stained Yellow With a Chemical Dye Pores are Impregnated With Blue-Dyed Epoxy Norphlet Sandstone, Offshore Alabama, USA Grains are About =< 0.25 mm in Diameter/Length Porosity in Sandstone Pore Throat Pores Provide the Volume to Contain Hydrocarbon Fluids Pore Throats Restrict Fluid Flow Scanning Electron Micrograph Norphlet Formation, Offshore Alabama, USA Diagenesis Carbonate Cemented Diagenesis is the PostDepositional Chemical and Mechanical Changes that Occur in Sedimentary Rocks Some Diagenetic Effects Include Oil Stained Whole Core Misoa Formation, Venezuela Compaction Precipitation of Cement Dissolution of Framework Grains and Cement The Effects of Diagenesis May Enhance or Degrade Reservoir Quality Fluids Affecting Diagenesis Precipitation Evaporation Evapotranspiration Water Table Infiltration Meteoric Water COMPACTIONAL WATER Petroleum Fluids Meteoric Water Zone of abnormal pressure Isotherms CH 4,CO 2,H2 S Subsidence (modified from from Galloway and Hobday, 1983) Dissolution Porosity Partially Dissolved Feldspar Pore Quartz Detrital Grain Dissolution of Framework Grains (Feldspar, for Example) and Cement may Enhance the Interconnected Pore System This is Called Secondary Porosity Thin Section Micrograph - Plane Polarized Light Avile Sandstone, Neuquen Basin, Argentina (Photomicrograph by R.L. Kugler) Hydrocarbon Generation, Migration, and Accumulation Coal, Oil And Natural Gas Formation The carbon molecules (sugar) that a tree had used to build itself are attacked by oxygen from the air and broken down. This environment that the tree is decaying in is called an aerobic environment. All this means is that oxygen is available. If oxygen is not available (anaerobic environment), the chains of carbon molecules that make up the tree are not be broken down. If the tree is buried for a long time (millions of years) under high pressures and temperatures, water, sap and other liquids are removed, leaving behind just the carbon molecule chains. Depending on the depth and duration of burial, peat, lignite, bitumen and anthracite coal is formed. Difference between coal and oil Crude oil is a naturally occurring, flammable liquid consisting of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons of various molecular weights and other liquid organic compounds, that are found in geologic formations beneath the Earth's surface. Like coal, forms by anerobic decay and break down of organic material. However, while coal is solid, crude oil is liquid. Coal contains massive molecules of carbon rings derived from plant fibres that can be very long, sometimes metres long or more. The carbon chains in oil are tiny by comparison. They are the structural remains of microscopic organisms and so they are ALL very small Oil And Natural Gas Formation Kerogen • http://www.sciencelearn.org.nz/Contexts/Future-Fuels/Sci-Media/Animations-and-Interactives/Oil-formation Organic Matter in Sedimentary Rocks Kerogen Disseminated Organic Matter in Sedimentary Rocks That is Insoluble in Oxidizing Acids, Bases, and Organic Solvents. Reflected-Light Micrograph of Coal Interpretation of Total Organic Carbon (TOC) (based on early oil window maturity) Hydrocarbon Generation Potential TOC in Shale (wt. %) TOC in Carbonates (wt. %) Poor 0.0-0.5 0.0-0.2 Fair 0.5-1.0 0.2-0.5 Good 1.0-2.0 0.5-1.0 Very Good 2.0-5.0 1.0-2.0 >5.0 >2.0 Excellent Progressive Burial and Heating Schematic Representation of the Mechanism of Petroleum Generation and Destruction Organic Debris Diagenesis Oil Reservoir Kerogen Initial Bitumen Catagenesis Thermal Degradation Oil and Gas Cracking Metagenesis Carbon (modified from Tissot and Welte, 1984) Methane Migration Generation, Migration, and Trapping of Hydrocarbons Fault (impermeable) Oil/water contact (OWC) Migration route Seal Hydrocarbon accumulation in the reservoir rock Top of maturity Source rock Reservoir rock Cross Section Of A Petroleum System (Foreland Basin Example) Geographic Extent of Petroleum System Extent of Play Extent of Prospect/Field O Stratigraphic Extent of Petroleum System Pod of Active Source Rock Essential Elements of Petroleum System O Overburden Rock Seal Rock Reservoir Rock Source Rock Underburden Rock Petroleum Reservoir (O) Basement Rock Fold-and-Thrust Belt (arrows indicate relative fault motion) (modified from Magoon and Dow, 1994) Top Oil Window Top Gas Window Sedimentary Basin Fill O Hydrocarbon Traps • Structural traps • Stratigraphic traps • Combination traps Structural Hydrocarbon Traps Shale Oil Gas Trap Closure Oil/Gas Contact Oil/Water Contact Oil Fracture Basement Salt Dome Fold Trap Salt Diapir Oil (modified from Bjorlykke, 1989) Hydrocarbon Traps - Dome Gas Sandstone Oil Shale Fault Trap Oil / Gas Stratigraphic Hydrocarbon Traps Unconformity Pinch out Uncomformity Oil/Gas Oil/Gas (modified from Bjorlykke, 1989) Uranium deposit formation Transported as U+6(uranyl) Uranium Ore Deposited as U+4 (uraninite) Uranium deposit Oil and Natural Gas System An oil and natural gas system requires timely convergence of geologic processes essential to the formation of crude oil and gas accumulations. These Include: Mature source rock Hydrocarbon expulsion Hydrocarbon migration Hydrocarbon accumulation Hydrocarbon retention (modified from Demaison and Huizinga, 1994) Cross Section Of A Petroleum System (Foreland Basin Example) Geographic Extent of Petroleum System Extent of Play Extent of Prospect/Field O Stratigraphic Extent of Petroleum System Pod of Active Source Rock Essential Elements of Petroleum System O Overburden Rock Seal Rock Reservoir Rock Source Rock Underburden Rock Petroleum Reservoir (O) Basement Rock Fold-and-Thrust Belt (arrows indicate relative fault motion) (modified from Magoon and Dow, 1994) Top Oil Window Top Gas Window Sedimentary Basin Fill O Hydrocarbon Traps • Structural traps • Stratigraphic traps Structural Hydrocarbon Traps Oil Shale Trap Oil/Gas Contact Gas Closure Oil/Water Contact Oil Fracture Basement Salt Dome Fold Trap Salt Diapir Oil (modified from Bjorlykke, 1989) Hydrocarbon Traps - Dome Gas Sandstone Oil Shale Fault Trap Oil / Gas Stratigraphic Hydrocarbon Traps Unconformity Uncomformity Oil/Gas (modified from Bjorlykke, 1989)