TY - JOUR
T1 - Weathering-induced organic matter enrichment in marine-continental transitional shale
T2 - A case study on the early Permian Taiyuan Formation in the Ordos Basin, China
AU - Zhao, Zhengfu
AU - Zou, Caineng
AU - Dai, Shifeng
AU - Guo, Zhaojie
AU - Li, Yong
AU - Nielsen, Arne Thorshøj
AU - Schovsbo, Niels Hemmingsen
AU - Jing, Zhenhua
AU - Liu, Hanlin
AU - Yuan, Ming
AU - Fu, Fangliang
AU - Yin, Jia
AU - Jiang, Fujie
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2024/8/30
Y1 - 2024/8/30
N2 - A comparative analysis of the factors controlling organic matter (OM) enrichment between marine-continental transitional (transitional hereafter) and marine or lacustrine shales is lacking. The early Permian Taiyuan Formation in the Ordos Basin, deposited during a shift from marine to continental settings in northern China, provides a unique opportunity to unravel the differences in OM enrichment mechanisms among these shales. The Taiyuan Formation is characterized by high TOC content (average 4.50%) and kerogen type II2-III. Most samples are thermally mature with a few high to post-mature samples relating to the Late Jurassic–Early Cretaceous Yanshanian magmatism. Rare earth elements and yttrium (REY) are dominated by light- and medium-types enrichments, with distinctly positive Gd anomaly, likely due to seawater incursion. A warm and humid climate prevailed during deposition of the Taiyuan Formation, consistent with the tropical-subtropical location of the North China Plate in the early Permian. The climatic conditions promoted intense continental weathering as reflected by high Th/Sc ratios, chemical index of alteration values, and feldspar alteration to scaly kaolinite. The V/(V + Ni) ratio is inconsistent with the other redox proxies, presumably due to variations in the redox buffer supply in the transitional facies (e.g., OM and pyrite), varying burial rates and dissimilar redox potential of different elements. Hence, this proxy should be interpreted with caution in such settings. Most redox proxies indicate oxic bottom water during deposition of the Taiyuan Formation transitional shale, in contrast to typical OM enriched marine and lacustrine shales where redox stratification or euxinic conditions are common. Instead, the dominant factor for OM enrichment in transitional shales appears to have been a high influx of terrestrial weathering products, including abundant higher-plants OM, associated with preservation of OM due to rapid burial. This process minimizes the detrimental effects of oxic conditions on OM accumulation in the transitional shale facies. This mechanism may hold relevance for analogous basins elsewhere.
AB - A comparative analysis of the factors controlling organic matter (OM) enrichment between marine-continental transitional (transitional hereafter) and marine or lacustrine shales is lacking. The early Permian Taiyuan Formation in the Ordos Basin, deposited during a shift from marine to continental settings in northern China, provides a unique opportunity to unravel the differences in OM enrichment mechanisms among these shales. The Taiyuan Formation is characterized by high TOC content (average 4.50%) and kerogen type II2-III. Most samples are thermally mature with a few high to post-mature samples relating to the Late Jurassic–Early Cretaceous Yanshanian magmatism. Rare earth elements and yttrium (REY) are dominated by light- and medium-types enrichments, with distinctly positive Gd anomaly, likely due to seawater incursion. A warm and humid climate prevailed during deposition of the Taiyuan Formation, consistent with the tropical-subtropical location of the North China Plate in the early Permian. The climatic conditions promoted intense continental weathering as reflected by high Th/Sc ratios, chemical index of alteration values, and feldspar alteration to scaly kaolinite. The V/(V + Ni) ratio is inconsistent with the other redox proxies, presumably due to variations in the redox buffer supply in the transitional facies (e.g., OM and pyrite), varying burial rates and dissimilar redox potential of different elements. Hence, this proxy should be interpreted with caution in such settings. Most redox proxies indicate oxic bottom water during deposition of the Taiyuan Formation transitional shale, in contrast to typical OM enriched marine and lacustrine shales where redox stratification or euxinic conditions are common. Instead, the dominant factor for OM enrichment in transitional shales appears to have been a high influx of terrestrial weathering products, including abundant higher-plants OM, associated with preservation of OM due to rapid burial. This process minimizes the detrimental effects of oxic conditions on OM accumulation in the transitional shale facies. This mechanism may hold relevance for analogous basins elsewhere.
KW - Marine-continental transitional shale
KW - OM enrichment
KW - Ordos Basin
KW - Taiyuan Formation
KW - Weathering
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85199320364&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.coal.2024.104562
DO - 10.1016/j.coal.2024.104562
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85199320364
SN - 0166-5162
VL - 291
JO - International Journal of Coal Geology
JF - International Journal of Coal Geology
M1 - 104562
ER -