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Abstract


 
Chapter from: SG 40:  Paleogeography, Paleoclimate, and Source Rocks
Edited By 
Alain-Yves Huc

Author: 
William W. Hay

Geochemistry, Generation, Migration

Published 1995 as part of Studies in Geology 40
Copyright © 1995 The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.   All Rights Reserved.

Chapter 2

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Paleoceanography of Marine Organic-Carbon-Rich Sediments

William W. Hay

GEOMAR

Kiel, Federal Republic of Germany

and

University of Colorado

Boulder, Colorado, U.S.A.


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ABSTRACT


Marine organic-carbon-rich deposits occur where there is an ample rain of organic particulate material to the sea floor and conditions favorable to its preservation. It was originally thought that the accumulation of organic carbon (Corg) was dependent mostly on anoxic conditions at the site of deposition; two such environments, the stagnant basin and the O2 minimum, were often cited as models. High productivity in the overlying waters has become recognized to be of greater importance. In an overall evaluation of burial of Corg in marine sediments, it is apparent that terrigenous input of organic matter is the largest source, followed by marine organic matter fixed in highly productive coastal areas receiving nutrients from land. In terms of rich accumulations of marine organic matter most likely to generate petroleum, areas of ocean upwelling along continental margins are most significant. 

Upwelling and nutrient availability in the upwelled waters are two different aspects of oceanographic conditions. Coastal upwelling is only one of a number of different mechanisms that bring deeper waters to the surface. High-latitude convective motions upwell and downwell large volumes of water rapidly, so that only part of the nutrients can be utilized by phytoplankton. Equatorial upwelling produces high productivity over the ocean basins but rarely impinges on continental margins. Other upwelling modes in the open ocean, such as that associated with ice margins, currents, thermocline domes, cyclonic eddies, and Ekman pumping, may have been significant in the past, but little is known about their geologic record. Wind-driven and Kelvin wave-driven coastal upwelling occurs on the eastern margins of the ocean basins in the tropics and subtropics, but the upwelled water is not everywhere nutrient rich. The upwelling is locally enhanced by favorable bathymetry offshore or orographic conditions on land. 

In considering how the ocean may have operated in the past, it is necessary to consider how the structure of the ocean may have differed in the past. Other processes, such as caballing, the sinking of denser water produced by mixing waters of equal density but of different temperatures and salinities, 

 

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