Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5162663 | Organic Geochemistry | 2015 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Results indicate that the kerogen residues from the conventional open system method showed lower recovery and higher mineral content than those from the conservative closed system method. Differences were manifested in the elemental analysis data, where kerogens isolated using the open system method showed a significant deficit in the organic C, H, O, S and N material balance. Furthermore, the recovered residues show different sulfur content and δ34S composition, most likely attributable to differences in pyrite content. Nevertheless, the relative abundances of the various macerals in the kerogen residues from the same parent shale are not very different; neither was the bulk δ13C composition of the recovered residues. This is not particularly surprising, considering that in all the five cases examined in this study, the organic matter was fairly homogeneous.
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Authors
Denet Pernia, K.K. (Adry) Bissada, Joseph Curiale,