Earth Science Frontiers ›› 2023, Vol. 30 ›› Issue (3): 151-164.DOI: 10.13745/j.esf.sf.2022.5.39

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Influence of microscopic fabric on organic matter occurrence and pore development in mudrock: A case study of the Cretaceous Eagle Ford Shale

SHAO Deyong1,2(), LI Yanfang2, ZHANG Liuliu3, LUO Huan3, MENG Kang1, ZHANG Yu1, SONG Hui1, ZHANG Tongwei4,*()   

  1. 1. State Key Laboratory of Continental Dynamics, Department of Geology, Northwest University, Xi’an 710069, China
    2. State Key Laboratory of Organic Geochemistry, Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510640, China
    3. School of Earth Sciences, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou 730000, China
    4. Bureau of Economic Geology,Jackson School of Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78713, USA
  • Received:2022-04-06 Revised:2022-04-30 Online:2023-05-25 Published:2023-04-27

Abstract:

The characteristics of organic matter (OM) occurrence and pore development in the Cretaceous Eagle Ford Shale of South Texas, USA were studied at the micrometer scale through analyses of the original oil-window core and artificial gas-window cylinder samples by Ar ion milling/scanning electron micrography (SEM) method, combined with energy-dispersive spectroscopy mapping. Three typical rock fabric types—siliceous-argillaceous seams, foraminifera fossils, and coccolith-rich lenses—were observed under microscope which revealed significantly varying OM occurrences and pore development characteristics. Specifically, in siliceous-argillaceous seams, enriched amorphous kerogen developed few pores within the oil window due to oil sorption until nano spongy pores began to form in large numbers within the gas window as a result of sorbed-oil cracking; whereas structured kerogen, of small quantity, had little or no pore development through the entire petroleum-formation period due to its abnormally low hydrocarbon generation potential. In foraminifera fossil chamber, filling OM represented migrated bitumen that charged during the early stage and developed an abundance of bubbly pores and spongy nanopores within the oil window, and then, with coalesce of nanopores, micron scale large pores began to dominate within the gas window. And in coccolith-rich lenses, filling OM of migrated bitumen charged in the late stage was characterized by abundant spongy nanopores within the oil window, whereas within the gas window abundant mineral intergranular pores re-exposed due to high OM conversion rate. This study demonstrated that the formation and development of OM-hosted pores in marine mudrock were controlled by both OM type and thermal maturity. It provided an important approach to studying the process of hydrocarbon generation, expulsion, and retention as well as revealing the carrier medium of OM-hosted pores and pore preservation mechanisms in mature marine shales in the subsurface by investigating the spatial relationship between microscopic fabric, OM occurrence, and pore heterogeneity in organic-rich mudrock.

Key words: mudrock fabric, OM occurrence, migrated bitumen, OM-hosted pore, thermal maturity, Eagle Ford Shale

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