Emplacement of oil in the devonian weardale granite of northern england

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Abstract

Oil residues occur as solid bitumen in mineralized zones within the Devonian Weardale Granite of the northern Pennines, northern England. Comparable residues are present in the overlying Mississippian rocks and were probably derived from a Carboniferous source, i.e. during later mineralization of the granite. The bitumen was already solidified during fluorite mineralization, which does not contain oil inclusions. The residues do not show the high thermal maturity of organic matter in the region altered by the earliest Permian Whin Sill. Like the sulphide-fluorite mineralization, oil emplacement post-dated intrusion of the sill. Pyrite associated with the oil residues is enriched in trace elements including lead, silver, gold, selenium and tellurium, which suggests that mineralizing fluids at least shared pathways with migrating hydrocarbons and possibly also suggests undiscovered valuable metal resources.

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Baba, M., Parnell, J., Bowden, S., Armstrong, J., Perez, M., & Wang, X. (2019). Emplacement of oil in the devonian weardale granite of northern england. Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society, 62(4), 229–237. https://doi.org/10.1144/pygs2018-008

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