The prospectivity of a potential shale gas play: An example from the southern Pennine Basin (central England, UK)

During the Serpukhovian (late Mississippian) Stage, the Pennine Basin, now underlying much of northern England, consisted of a series of interlinked sub-basins that developed in response to the crustal extension north of the Hercynic orogenic zone. For the current study, mudstone samples of the Morr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hennissen, Jan A.I., Hough, Edward, Vane, Christopher H., Leng, Melanie J., Kemp, Simon J., Stephenson, Michael H.
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2017
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43897/
_version_ 1848796790959112192
author Hennissen, Jan A.I.
Hough, Edward
Vane, Christopher H.
Leng, Melanie J.
Kemp, Simon J.
Stephenson, Michael H.
author_facet Hennissen, Jan A.I.
Hough, Edward
Vane, Christopher H.
Leng, Melanie J.
Kemp, Simon J.
Stephenson, Michael H.
author_sort Hennissen, Jan A.I.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description During the Serpukhovian (late Mississippian) Stage, the Pennine Basin, now underlying much of northern England, consisted of a series of interlinked sub-basins that developed in response to the crustal extension north of the Hercynic orogenic zone. For the current study, mudstone samples of the Morridge Formation from two sub-basins located in the south-eastern part of the Pennine Basin were collected from the Carsington Dam Reconstruction C3 Borehole (Widmerpool Gulf sub-basin) and the Karenight 1 Borehole (Edale Gulf sub-basin). Detailed palynological analyses indicate that aside from the dominant (often 90% or more) heterogeneous amorphous organic matter (AOM), variable abundances of homogeneous AOM and phytoclasts are present. To complement the palynological dataset, a suite of geochemical and mineralogical techniques were applied to evaluate the prospectivity of these potentially important source rocks. Changes in the carbon isotope composition of the bulk organic fraction (δ13COM) suggest that the lower part (Biozone E2a) of Carsington DR C3 is markedly more influenced by terrigenous kerogen than the upper part of the core (Biozones E2a3–E2b1). The Karenight 1 core yielded more marine kerogen in the lower part (Marine Bands E1–E2b) than the upper part (Marine Band E2b). Present day Rock-Eval™ Total Organic Carbon (TOC) surpasses 2% in most samples from both cores, a proportion suggested by Jarvie (2012) that defines prospective shale gas reservoirs. However, when the pyrolysable component that reflects the generative kerogen fraction is considered, very few samples reach this threshold. The kerogen typing permits for the first time the calculation of an original hydrogen index (HIo) and original total organic carbon (TOCo) for Carboniferous mudstones of the Pennine Basin. The most prospective part of Carsington DR C3 (marine bands E2b1–E2a3) has an average TOCo of 3.2% and an average HIo of 465 mg/g TOCo. The most prospective part of Karenight 1 (242.80–251.89 m) is characterized by an average TOCo of 9.3% and an average HIo of 504 mg/g TOCo. Lastly, X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis confirms that the siliceous to argillaceous mudstones contain a highly variable carbonate content. The palynological, geochemical and mineralogical proxies combined indicate that marine sediments were continuously being deposited throughout the sampled intervals and were punctuated by episodic turbiditic events. The terrestrial material, originating from the Wales-Brabant High to the south of the Pennine Basin, was principally deposited in the Widmerpool Gulf, with much less terrigenous organic matter reaching the Edale Gulf. As a consequence, the prospective intervals are relatively thin, decimetre-to meter-scale, and further high resolution characterization of these intervals is required to understand variability in prospectivitiy over these limited intervals.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T19:53:35Z
format Article
id nottingham-43897
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T19:53:35Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Elsevier
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-438972020-05-04T18:51:38Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43897/ The prospectivity of a potential shale gas play: An example from the southern Pennine Basin (central England, UK) Hennissen, Jan A.I. Hough, Edward Vane, Christopher H. Leng, Melanie J. Kemp, Simon J. Stephenson, Michael H. During the Serpukhovian (late Mississippian) Stage, the Pennine Basin, now underlying much of northern England, consisted of a series of interlinked sub-basins that developed in response to the crustal extension north of the Hercynic orogenic zone. For the current study, mudstone samples of the Morridge Formation from two sub-basins located in the south-eastern part of the Pennine Basin were collected from the Carsington Dam Reconstruction C3 Borehole (Widmerpool Gulf sub-basin) and the Karenight 1 Borehole (Edale Gulf sub-basin). Detailed palynological analyses indicate that aside from the dominant (often 90% or more) heterogeneous amorphous organic matter (AOM), variable abundances of homogeneous AOM and phytoclasts are present. To complement the palynological dataset, a suite of geochemical and mineralogical techniques were applied to evaluate the prospectivity of these potentially important source rocks. Changes in the carbon isotope composition of the bulk organic fraction (δ13COM) suggest that the lower part (Biozone E2a) of Carsington DR C3 is markedly more influenced by terrigenous kerogen than the upper part of the core (Biozones E2a3–E2b1). The Karenight 1 core yielded more marine kerogen in the lower part (Marine Bands E1–E2b) than the upper part (Marine Band E2b). Present day Rock-Eval™ Total Organic Carbon (TOC) surpasses 2% in most samples from both cores, a proportion suggested by Jarvie (2012) that defines prospective shale gas reservoirs. However, when the pyrolysable component that reflects the generative kerogen fraction is considered, very few samples reach this threshold. The kerogen typing permits for the first time the calculation of an original hydrogen index (HIo) and original total organic carbon (TOCo) for Carboniferous mudstones of the Pennine Basin. The most prospective part of Carsington DR C3 (marine bands E2b1–E2a3) has an average TOCo of 3.2% and an average HIo of 465 mg/g TOCo. The most prospective part of Karenight 1 (242.80–251.89 m) is characterized by an average TOCo of 9.3% and an average HIo of 504 mg/g TOCo. Lastly, X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis confirms that the siliceous to argillaceous mudstones contain a highly variable carbonate content. The palynological, geochemical and mineralogical proxies combined indicate that marine sediments were continuously being deposited throughout the sampled intervals and were punctuated by episodic turbiditic events. The terrestrial material, originating from the Wales-Brabant High to the south of the Pennine Basin, was principally deposited in the Widmerpool Gulf, with much less terrigenous organic matter reaching the Edale Gulf. As a consequence, the prospective intervals are relatively thin, decimetre-to meter-scale, and further high resolution characterization of these intervals is required to understand variability in prospectivitiy over these limited intervals. Elsevier 2017-06-27 Article PeerReviewed Hennissen, Jan A.I., Hough, Edward, Vane, Christopher H., Leng, Melanie J., Kemp, Simon J. and Stephenson, Michael H. (2017) The prospectivity of a potential shale gas play: An example from the southern Pennine Basin (central England, UK). Marine and Petroleum Geology . ISSN 0264-8172 http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264817217302404 doi:10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2017.06.033 doi:10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2017.06.033
spellingShingle Hennissen, Jan A.I.
Hough, Edward
Vane, Christopher H.
Leng, Melanie J.
Kemp, Simon J.
Stephenson, Michael H.
The prospectivity of a potential shale gas play: An example from the southern Pennine Basin (central England, UK)
title The prospectivity of a potential shale gas play: An example from the southern Pennine Basin (central England, UK)
title_full The prospectivity of a potential shale gas play: An example from the southern Pennine Basin (central England, UK)
title_fullStr The prospectivity of a potential shale gas play: An example from the southern Pennine Basin (central England, UK)
title_full_unstemmed The prospectivity of a potential shale gas play: An example from the southern Pennine Basin (central England, UK)
title_short The prospectivity of a potential shale gas play: An example from the southern Pennine Basin (central England, UK)
title_sort prospectivity of a potential shale gas play: an example from the southern pennine basin (central england, uk)
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43897/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43897/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43897/