ESTONIAN ACADEMY
PUBLISHERS
eesti teaduste
akadeemia kirjastus
PUBLISHED
SINCE 1984
 
Oil Shale cover
Oil Shale
ISSN 1736-7492 (Electronic)
ISSN 0208-189X (Print)
Impact Factor (2022): 1.9
Sr AND Nd ISOTOPIC SYSTEMATICS OF MID-CRETACEOUS ORGANIC-RICH ROCKS (OIL SHALES) FROM THE QIANGTANG BASIN: IMPLICATIONS FOR SOURCE REGIONS AND SEDIMENTARY PALEOENVIRONMENT; pp. 109–123
PDF | doi: 10.3176/oil.2015.2.02

Authors
XIUGEN FU, JIAN WANG, FUWEN TAN, XINGLEI FENG, WENBIN CHEN, CHUNYAN SONG, SHENGQIANG ZENG
Abstract

The Mid-Cretaceous oil shale from the Qiangtang Basin represents the potentially largest marine oil shale resource in China. 23 samples, includ­ing oil shale and marl, were collected from the Basin’s Shengli River area to determine Sr and Nd isotope compositions, discuss sedimentary sources and paleoenvironmental changes. The Nd isotopic compositions of the Shengli River oil shale are similar to those of the Nadi Kangri Formation volcanic rocks and the underlying Suowa Formation limestone, indicating the Nadi Kangri Formation volcanic rocks and the Suowa Formation limestone origins of oil shale. The TDm ages of oil shale may be considered as the mean age of the upper continental crust in the Qiangtang Basin. Therefore, just like other fine-grained continental sediments, oil shale comprises sampled source rocks that were particularly well mixed through multiple stages of sedi­mentary recycling. The oil shale samples from the Shengli River area have higher 87Sr/86Sr ratios than the contemporary seawater. The high 87Sr/86Sr ratio reflects the Sr isotope composition of their original precipitation fluids. Marl samples from this area exhibit slightly higher 87Sr/86Sr ratios (mean = 0.7084) than oil shale samples (mean = 0.7076), and show a dramatic Sr isotopic shift near the boundary between the oil shale seams and marl beds. This shift is closely correlated with a rapid change in Nd isotopic com­positions, indicating paleoenvironmental changes across the oil shale-marl boundary.

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