Petroleum potential of the Upper Jurassic Hareelv Formation, Jameson Land, East Greenland

Jørgen A Bojesen-Kofoed, Morten Bjerager, H.-P. Nytoft, Henrik I. Petersen, Stefan Piasecki, Anders Pilgaard

    12 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The marine, mudstone-dominated Hareelv Formation (Upper Jurassic) of Jameson Land, East Greenland is a representative of the widespread Kimmeridge Clay Formation equivalents, sensu lato, known from the greater North Atlantic region, western Siberia and basins off eastern Canada. These deposits constitute the most important petroleum source-rock succession of the region. The present study reports petroleum geochemical data from the 233.8 m thick succession penetrated by the fully cored Blokelv-1 borehole, and includes supplementary data from outcrop samples and other boreholes in Jameson Land. The succession consists of basinal mudstone intercalated with a significant proportion of gravity-flow sandstones, both in situ and remobilised as injectites. The mudstones are generally rich in organic carbon with values of TOC reaching nearly 19 wt% and high pyrolysis yields reaching values of S2 up to nearly 43 kg HC/ton. Hydrogen Indices are up to 363. The data presented herein demonstrate that weathering of abundant pyritic sulfur adversely affects the petroleum potential of the kerogen in outcrop samples. The succession is thermally immature to early mature, except where intrusions have locally heated adjacent mudstones. The documentation of rich gas/oil-prone Upper Jurassic successions in Jameson Land is important for the assessment of the regional petroleum potential, including the North-East Greenland continental shelf.

    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationGeological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin
    Volume42
    Publication date2018
    Pages85-113
    Publication statusPublished - 2018
    SeriesGeological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) Bulletin
    ISSN1604-8156

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