Abstract

The hydrocarbon source rock potential of the Devonian Marcellus and Kettle Point black shales in southern Ontario has been assessed using Rock-Eval pyrolysis, gas chromatography, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and incident-light microscopy. Both formations contain sufficient hydrogen-rich organic matter (Type II) to be considered possible source rocks. The kerogen is predominantly marine in origin. This organic matter was deposited in a clastic algal-dominated environment, and mainly consists of unstructured bituminite and unicellular alginite. The organic microfacies indicate shelf paleodepositional settings with a transition to an open basinal region. The optical (reflectance, fluorescence) and geochemical (Rock-Eval Tmax, extract yields, distributions of steranes and terpanes) maturity data indicate that the organic matter in the Kettle Point Formation is immature, whereas in the Marcellus Formation it has reached the early stages of hydrocarbon generation and expulsion. Some Devonian oils occurring in this area have characteristics similar to the Marcellus extracts, suggesting that more mature equivalent units from the Appalchian Basin could be their source.

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