Petroleum surface oil seeps from a Palaeoproterozoic petrified giant oilfield

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Abstract

Early Palaeoproterozoic rocks from the Onega Basin in Russian Fennoscandia contain evidence for substantial accumulation and preservation of organic matter (up to 75 wt% total organic carbon) with an estimated original petroleum potential comparable to a modern supergiant oilfield. The basin contains a uniquely preserved petrified oilfield including evidence of oil traps and oil migration pathways. Here, we report the discovery of the surface expression of a migration pathway, along which petroleum was flowing from the sub-surface. This surface oil seep, the first occurrence ever reported from the Palaeoproterozoic, appears as original bitumen clasts redeposited in Palaeoproterozoic lacustrine turbidites. The δ13 Corg of clastic pyrobitumen ranges between -35.4 and -36.0‰ (n = 14), which is within the range of interbed- and vein-trapped fossil oil (-46 and -24‰), suggesting similar source. Biogenic organic matter, whose isotopic composition was modified during thermal maturation, is the likely source for the migrated hydrocarbon. © 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Melezhik, V. A., Fallick, A. E., Filippov, M. M., Lepland, A., Rychanchik, D. V., Deines, Y. E., … Strauss, H. (2009). Petroleum surface oil seeps from a Palaeoproterozoic petrified giant oilfield. Terra Nova, 21(2), 119–126. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3121.2009.00864.x

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