Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6435117 Marine and Petroleum Geology 2015 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Formation of magnetic minerals under hydrocarbon-generation conditions.•Minerals formed include greigite, pyrrhotite and possibly magnetite.•Magnetic grains are nanometre-sized and could migrate alongside crude oil.•Established a possible source of positive magnetic relief observed over oil fields.

In this paper, we report the pyrolysis and formation of magnetic minerals in three source rock samples from the Wessex Basin in Dorset, southern England. The experimental conditions in the laboratory recreated the catagenesis environment of oil source rocks. Magnetic analysis of both the heated and the unheated samples at room temperature and at very low-temperatures (5 K), coupled with transmission electron-microscopy imaging and X-ray analysis, revealed the formation of nanometre-sized (<10 nm), magnetic particles that varied across the rock samples analysed, but more importantly across the pyrolysis temperature range. Magnetic measurements demonstrated the formation of these magnetic minerals peaked at 250 °C for all rock samples and then decreased at 300 °C before rising again at 320 °C. The newly formed magnetic minerals are suggested to be primarily pyrrhotite, though magnetite and greigite are also thought to be present. The sizes of the magnetic minerals formed suggest a propensity to migrate together with oil potentially explaining the magnetic anomalies observed above and within oil fields.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Economic Geology
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