Abstract

Petroleum is associated with sulfide-rich sediment at two active oceanic spreading axes in the northeast Pacific Ocean. In the Guaymas Basin, a spreading axis in the Gulf of California, petroleum having a wide range of compositions forms by hydrothermal alteration of organic matter in Quaternary sediment composed mainly of marine diatomaceous ooze and muddy turbidites. In Escanaba Trough, at the southern end of the Gorda Ridge spreading axis offshore northern California, petroleum is formed by hydrothermal processes acting on mainly terrigenous organic material in Quaternary turbiditic river-derived sediment. Comparisons of the distributions of hydrocarbons--n-alkanes, isoprenoids, terpanes, steranes, and aromatics--show that chemical differences among four petroleum samp es are such that two samples from Guaymas Basin can be distinguished from two samples from Escanaba Trough. Distinguishing characteristics resulting from differences in sources include n-alkane distributions and certain sterane ratios; distinguishing characteristics resulting from differences in thermal histories of the organic matter include hopane and sterane epimer ratios and various distributions of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. These oils differ from conventionally derived petroleum in that they are admixtures of products generated over a wide range of thermal regimes, and their generation, expulsion, and migration occurred simultaneously over an instantaneous geological time period. The potential economic significance of hydrothermally derived petroleum is uncertain, but the act that petroleum can form at active oceanic spreading axes adds a new facet to understanding the processes of petroleum generation, expulsion, and migration.

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