4.7 Article

Near equatorial paleoclimatic evolution and control on organic matter accumulation during the Cenomanian in the Abu Gharadig Basin, southern Tethys: Insights from palynology, organic petrography, and geochemistry

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COAL GEOLOGY
Volume 270, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.coal.2023.104221

Keywords

Sediment geochemistry; Spore color analysis; Organic carbon burial; Kerogen types; Source rock assessment; Bahariya Formation; North Western Desert

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During the Late Cretaceous, there was a major marine transgression in north Africa, which was interrupted by sea level falls and resulted in the accumulation of organic matter-rich sediments. The Bahariya Formation in northern Egypt was deposited in the Abu Gharadig Basin and characterized by thick alternations of siliciclastic sediments. An integrated approach was used to analyze the organic matter and its paleoenvironmental and paleoclimatic conditions. The results show a warm and humid climate, gas-prone kerogen, and low organic carbon contents in the Bahariya Formation.
The beginning of the Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian) attested to a major marine transgression interrupted by sea level falls in north Africa, which led to significant environmental perturbation and widespread accumulation of organic matter-rich sediments. During this period, northern Egypt was located at the southern edge of the Tethys Ocean and deposition of thick siliciclastic alternations between shales, siltstones, and sandstones of the Bahariya Formation took place in the BED2 gas field of the Abu Gharadig Basin, north Western Desert. An integrated approach of palynofacies analysis and palynomorph composition, organic petrography, and geochemical analysis of total organic carbon (TOC)/Rock-Eval pyrolysis, carbonate content, XRD analysis, and clay mineralogy of thirty-nine cutting samples obtained from the lower-middle Cenomanian Bahariya Formation was conducted. This approach was used to characterize organic matter and possible occurrence of source rock intervals, pale-oenvironmental and paleoclimatic conditions and their role in organic matter accumulation. Moderate to high proportions of pteridophyte and water fern spores and pollen grains of Araucariaceae (Araucariacites), Cheir-olepidiaceae (mainly Classopollis), and Gnetalean (Elaterate pollen) and Afropollis versus the sparsely recorded xerophilous ephedroids (Ephedripites) indicate prevalent conditions of a warm and humid climate. This is consistent with clay mineral composition that is dominated mainly by kaolinite and smectite compared to low illite and the lack of chlorite, which indicated a predominantly warm-humid climate state. Palynofacies analysis showed two assemblages; the first one is dominated by phytoclasts and indicates gas-prone Type III kerogen and deposition in a fluvio-deltaic environment. The second palynofacies assemblage is characterized by moderate abundance of phytoclasts and AOM mostly of terrestrial origin, suggesting a mixed Type III/II kerogen and deposition in a marginal to shallow neritic shelf environment. The organic geochemical characterization showed relatively low average values of TOC, S2, and HI, indicating that the Bahariya Formation is characterized by Type III gas-prone kerogen. Thermal maturity of the Bahariya Formation ranges from immature to the early stage of the oil window. Additionally, organic matter characteristics of the Bahariya Formation are qualitatively and quantitatively similar to their equivalents from nearby basins. Low TOC contents are attributed to a high sedi-mentation rate and an increased terrestrial input of sand-and silt-sized fractions at shallow water column settings that controlled strong dilution and decomposition versus low burial efficiency of the organic matter.

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