Abstract

The formation and accumulation of lacustrine organic-rich shales are strongly related to palaeoclimate and palaeoenvironmental conditions. Middle Jurassic organic-rich lacustrine shales in the Qaidam Basin, NW China, are important source rocks for unconventional oil and gas exploration, but factors controlling their organic matter (OM) abundance and preservation are unclear. To understand how palaeoclimate and palaeoenvironmental conditions influenced depositional processes and elucidate the factors controlling OM accumulation of lacustrine organic-rich shales, we investigated total organic carbon (TOC), mineral compositions, and element geochemistry the Shale Member of the Middle Jurassic (J2s2) Shimengou Formation from the Yuqia Coalfield in the Qaidam Basin. From the bottom to the top, the Shale Member includes three significant stages based on their average TOC values of 5.45% (Stage I), 9.90% (Stage II), and 1.10% (Stage III). Paleoclimate proxies including C-values and Rb/Sr ratios indicate that in Stage I the lake developed under warm and humid conditions, while in Stage II climate changed to hot and arid/semiarid conditions before returning to warm and humid climates in Stage III. Correlation analysis among proxies for palaeoclimate, terrestrial influx (Al2O3 and TiO2 contents), sedimentation rate ((La/Yb) N ratios), palaeosalinity (Sr/Ba ratios and B/Ga ratios), palaeoproductivity (P/Ti ratios and Sibio contents), redox conditions (Corg/P ratios), and TOC values revealed that palaeoclimate had little direct impact on OM accumulation, with palaeoenvironmental conditions the main controlling factor for OM accumulation. OM accumulation in Stage I was primarily controlled by redox conditions, followed by palaeoproductivity, terrigenous influx, and sedimentation rate. In Stage II, high palaeoproductivity and anoxic bottom water conditions controlled OM accumulation, resulting in the deposition of oil shales with abundant hydrocarbon potential. In Stage III, poor OM preservation related to oxic redox condition was the primary controlling factor for OM accumulation. We suggest that variations in lake palaeoenvironments induced by palaeoclimate change controlled OM accumulation and petroleum potential.

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