Souza, Iasmine Maciel Silva; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0565-7170; http://lattes.cnpq.br/9772493262509498
Abstract:
The Amazon Basin is an intracratonic basin of Paleozoic age located in northern
Brazil. It is known for being a pioneer area in oil exploration, being considered an
area of new exploratory frontier. The shales of Fm. Barreirinha (Devonian) are
hydrocarbon source rocks, with Mb. Abacaxis (Frasnian) being the most important
generators. At the end of the deposition of the Paleozoic sequence, and with the
beginning of the opening of the North Atlantic Ocean, the Penetecaua magmatism
allowed extensive sills and diabase dykes to intrude into the sedimentary rocks of the
Basin, mainly in the shales. The objective of this research was to evaluate the
depositional paleoenvironment and the influence of heat from igneous activities on
the maturation of organic matter, and on the potential for generating hydrocarbons in
samples from two distinct outcrops of the Fm. Barreirinha: I) near the Monte Alegre
Dome on the Northern border of the Basin, under the influence of igneous rocks; II)
on the Southern border, with less effect of igneous rocks. Thirty-five samples were
collected systematically, 12 located on the Northern border and 23 on the Southern
border, of the Amazon Basin. The samples were submitted to determination of total
organic carbon (TOC), Rock-Eval pyrolysis and analysis by gas chromatography with
ionization detector (GC-FID), gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS)
(biomarkers), petrography and determination of stable isotopes of carbon (δ
13C). The
results of the analyzes showed that the samples collected at the Northern border
have excellent values of TOC, S2 ranging from moderate to excellent and are at the
end of the oil generation window and beginning of gas generation. The kerogen was
classified as type III, however, as the area generated light hydrocarbons, the TOC,
S2 and IH values are residual. The results of saturated biomarker determinations
indicate the marine origin of the organic matter, which was deposited in an anoxic to
suboxic marine depositional paleoenvironment. The samples collected in the
Southern border, where the influence of the heat of the igneous rocks is smaller, the
TOC and the S2 varied from poor to excellent, with kerogen types II/III and III, being
with low maturation for the generation of hydrocarbons. The results of the
determination of saturated biomarkers indicated the marine origin of the organic
matter, with some contribution of organic matter of continental origin. These shales
were deposited in a suboxic to oxic environment. Still on the southern border, it was
possible to individualize two distinct palynofacies (I and II). The results of the
determinations of palynofacies and palynological associations indicated that the
sedimentation of the Barreirinha Formation occurred, initially, in this section, in a
shallow deltaic marine environment, grading to a distal marine depositional
environment. The ICE (Spore Color Índex) values ranged from 3.5 to 4.5,
characterizing the immature stage for hydrocarbon generation. The values of the
stable carbon isotope ratio (δ
13C), for all samples, despite being very negative (less
than -28‰), together with the results for the biomarkers, indicated a marine
depositional paleoenvironment.