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Abstract
Chapter from: M
66: Hydrocarbon Migration And Its Near-Surface Expression
Edited By
Dietmar Schumacher and Michael A. AbramsAuthor:
Dietmar Schumacher Geochemistry, Generation, Migration
Published 1996 as
part of Memoir 66
Copyright © 1996 The American Association of Petroleum
Geologists. All Rights Reserved. |
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Schumacher,
D., 1996, Hydrocarbon-induced alteration of soils and sediments, in
D. Schumacher and M. A. Abrams, eds., Hydrocarbon migration and its near-surface
expression: AAPG Memoir 66, p. 71-89. |
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Chapter
6
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Hydrocarbon-Induced
Alteration of Soils and Sediments |
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Dietmar Schumacher
Earth Sciences and Resources
Institute
University of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah
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Abstract
The surface
expression of hydrocarbon-induced alteration of soils and sediments can
take many forms, including (1) microbiological anomalies and the formation
of "paraffin dirt"; (2) mineralogic changes such as formation of calcite,
pyrite, uranium, elemental sulfur, and certain magnetic iron oxides and
sulfides;
(3) bleaching of red beds; (4) clay mineral alteration; (5) electrochemical
changes; (6) radiation anomalies; and (7) biogeochemical and geobotanical
anomalies.
Bacteria and other microbes
play a profound role in the oxidation of migrating hydrocarbons, and their
activities are directly or indirectly responsible for many of the surface
manifestations of hydrocarbon seepage. These activities, coupled with long-term
migration of hydrocarbons, lead to the development of near-surface oxidation-reduction
zones that favor the formation of a variety of hydrocarbon-induced chemical
and mineralogic changes. This hydrocarbon-induced alteration is highly
complex, and its varied surface expressions have led to the development
of an equally varied number of surface exploration techniques, including
soil carbonate methods, magnetic and electrical methods, radioactivity-based
methods, and remote sensing methods.
Exploration methods based
on what are assumed to be hydrocarbon-induced soil or sediment alterations
have long been popular. Many claims of success have been made for these
methods. However, well-documented studies are rare, and the claims are
seldom substantiated by a scientifically rigorous program of sampling and
analysis. The cause of these altered soils and sediments may well be hydrocarbon-related,
but hydrocarbons are an indirect cause at best and not the most probable
cause. Although the occurrence of hydrocarbon-induced geochemical alteration
is well established, considerable research is needed before we understand
the many factors affecting the formation of these anomalies in the near
surface. Only then will we realize their full value for hydrocarbon exploration. |
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