Paleoredox Conditions, Paleoproductivity, and Depositional Environment of an Eocene Black Shale: Mahogany Zone, Green River Formation, Eastern Uinta Basin, Utah

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Publication Type honors thesis
School or College College of Mines and Earth Sciences
Department Geology & Geophysics
Faculty Mentor Lauren Birgenheier
Creator Worms, Katherine
Title Paleoredox Conditions, Paleoproductivity, and Depositional Environment of an Eocene Black Shale: Mahogany Zone, Green River Formation, Eastern Uinta Basin, Utah
Date 2019
Description Black shales are commonly assumed to record anoxic, organically productive paleoenvironments. The Mahogany zone of the early Eocene Green River Formation is a classic example of an organic-rich black shale. It is thought to record a period of high ancient lake level conditions in which elevated algal productivity combined with prolonged anoxia resulted in the preservation of this highly prolific source rock. This research tests the classic anoxic, black shale model, using the Mahogany zone as a case study. The stratigraphic variability of paleoredox conditions, paleoproductivity and mud depositional processes through the Mahogany zone are further investigated using a newly drilled core (PR-15-7C) from the eastern Uinta Basin. High-resolution stratigraphic (5 mm spacing) handheld X-ray fluorescence analysis has been performed on the Mahogany zone (~12.8 m thick) of the core, which provides inorganic major and trace element abundance data. This was combined with quantitative red-green-blue (RGB) analysis of optical core photographs tied to Fischer assay (oil yield), which in combination provides a proxy for organic richness (calculated total organic carbon, TOC) at high stratigraphic resolution (up to a few hundred microns). Visual core description and standard thin section analysis of mudstone samples were used to determine different sedimentary processes of mud deposition (i.e., suspension settling versus hydrodynamic currents) in the lake system recorded by the Mahogany zone. Established marine paleoproductivity proxies, specifically Ni and Cu content, do not quantitatively correlate with Total Organic Carbon (TOC), however qualitative assessment of overall trends in TOC and Ni and Cu versus depth indicate a slight directly proportional relationship. Both the values of Ni and Cu are below the published average marine shale values, suggesting further investigation is needed to accurately apply these proxies to lacustrine systems. Therefore, we interpret TOC as a more reliable indicator of paleoproductivity in this system. Paleoredox proxies, specifically U and Mo content, are in agreement with published average marine shale values. Elevated levels of U and Mo indicate anoxic to euxinic conditions, with Mo displaying periods of euxinia in addition to baseline anoxia. Mo displays stratigraphic cyclicity, with average cycle lengths of about 16 kyr, based on bounding radiometric Ar- Ar dates from volcanic tuffs and an assumed linear sedimentation rate. Euxinic intervals also weakly correlate with higher TOC. This research suggests that the Mahogany zone records anoxic, highly productive conditions, in line with classical interpretations of anoxic black shale successions. The periodic prevalence of euxinic conditions is a new finding and further consideration to the role of H2S in organic matter preservation should be explored.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Language eng
Rights Management (c) Katherine Worms
Format Medium application/pdf
Permissions Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6nk947g
ARK ark:/87278/s6gj576v
Setname ir_htoa
ID 1589698
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6gj576v
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