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Depositional environment of Eocene oil shales of Wadi Shallala Formation from northern Jordan

Authors :
Mohammad S. Al-Atawneh
Jamal Nazzal
Saeb AlShraideh
Mahmoud H. Al-Tamimi
Mohammad Alqudah
Source :
Arabian Journal of Geosciences. 14
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Oil shale deposits of the mid-Eocene Wadi Shallala Formation in northern Jordan consist of organic-rich limestones and chalks. These organic-rich deposits are exposed at the surface near Wadi Ash Shajara, in a 12-m-thick outcrop. For this study, a total of 21 oil shale samples were analysed for bulk elemental geochemistry, inorganic geochemistry, organic geochemistry and microfacies analysis. Three microfacies types were recognised: pelagic mudstone/wackestone, foraminiferal packstone and bioclastic packstone/wackestone. The observed cyclicity of these microfacies in the study area indicates fluctuations in depositional conditions in Neo-Tethys during the mid-Eocene. A shallow-water, calm, restricted marine environment with limited water circulation and low energy currents evolved into a deeper-water environment with open circulation at or just below the wave base. Wadi Shallala Formation in Wadi Ash Shajara composes mainly of chalk (CaCO3 = ~92 wt%) with a TOC of up to 5 wt % and comprises abundant calcareous nannofossils, foraminifera and ostracods as well as non-clastic components like calcitic fragments. The sulphur content of the analysed samples is significant (1.24 wt %) and is associated with the organic matter. Redox-sensitive elements (Fe, Ni, Zn, S and Zr) are enriched in the oil shale samples, indicating an anoxic depositional environment fluctuating between euxinic and sub-euxinic. These fluctuations in depositional conditions of the basin are a result of many factors such as climate, and tectonisms affected deposition of oil shales during Middle Eocene time.

Details

ISSN :
18667538 and 18667511
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Arabian Journal of Geosciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........791a49d33285cbde29a12c1ffae09b9e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12517-021-06565-x