Kerogen: Composition and Classification

  • Tissot B
  • Welte D
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Abstract

The term kerogen will be used here to designate the organic constituent of the sedimentary rocks that is neither soluble in aqueous alkaline solvents nor in the common organic solvents. This is the most frequent acceptance of the term kerogen, and results from a direct generalization to other rock types of the definition by Breger (1961) in carbonaceous shales and oil shales. However, it should be kept in mind that some authors still restrict the name kerogen to the insoluble organic matter of oil shales only, because kerogen originally was applied to the organic material found in Scottish shales, which yielded oil upon a destructive distillation. Such a distinction seems very artificial from a geochemical point of view, as the definition of “oil shale” is itself mostly an economic concept (a rock able to provide commercial oil products by heating) and subject to variations, according to the progress of technology and the fluctuation of petroleum economy.

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Tissot, B. P., & Welte, D. H. (1978). Kerogen: Composition and Classification. In Petroleum Formation and Occurrence (pp. 123–147). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-96446-6_9

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