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Catagenesis (geology)

 

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Catagenesis (geology)



 
 
See Catagenesis (biology)
Catagenesis (biology)

Catagenesis is an archaic term from evolutionary biology referring to evolutionary directions that were considered "wiktionary:retrogressive." It was a term used in contrast to anagenesis, which in present usage denotes the evolution of a single population into a new form without branching lines of descent....
 for usage in the field of biology, where it refers to retrogressive evolution. Contrast with anagenesis
Anagenesis

Anagenesis, also known as "phyletic change", is the evolution of species involving a change in gene frequency in an entire population rather than a branching event, as in cladogenesis....
.


Catagenesis is a term used in petroleum geology
Petroleum geology

Petroleum geology refers to the specific set of geological disciplines that are applied to the search for hydrocarbons ....
 to describe the cracking
Cracking (chemistry)

In petroleum geology and chemistry, cracking is the process whereby complex organic compound molecules such as kerogens or heavy hydrocarbons are broken down into simpler molecules by the breaking of carbon-carbon chemical bond in the precursors....
 process which results in the conversion of organic kerogen
Kerogen

Kerogen is a mixture of organic chemistry chemical compounds that make up a portion of the organic matter in sedimentary rocks. It is insoluble in normal organic chemistry solvents because of the huge molecular mass of its component compounds....
s into hydrocarbon
Hydrocarbon

In organic chemistry, a hydrocarbon is an organic compound consisting entirely of hydrogen and carbon. With relation to chemical terminology, aromatic hydrocarbons or arenes, alkanes, alkenes and alkyne-based compounds composed entirely of carbon or hydrogen are referred to as "pure" hydrocarbons, whereas other hydrocarbons with bonded com...
s.








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See Catagenesis (biology)
Catagenesis (biology)

Catagenesis is an archaic term from evolutionary biology referring to evolutionary directions that were considered "wiktionary:retrogressive." It was a term used in contrast to anagenesis, which in present usage denotes the evolution of a single population into a new form without branching lines of descent....
 for usage in the field of biology, where it refers to retrogressive evolution. Contrast with anagenesis
Anagenesis

Anagenesis, also known as "phyletic change", is the evolution of species involving a change in gene frequency in an entire population rather than a branching event, as in cladogenesis....
.


Catagenesis is a term used in petroleum geology
Petroleum geology

Petroleum geology refers to the specific set of geological disciplines that are applied to the search for hydrocarbons ....
 to describe the cracking
Cracking (chemistry)

In petroleum geology and chemistry, cracking is the process whereby complex organic compound molecules such as kerogens or heavy hydrocarbons are broken down into simpler molecules by the breaking of carbon-carbon chemical bond in the precursors....
 process which results in the conversion of organic kerogen
Kerogen

Kerogen is a mixture of organic chemistry chemical compounds that make up a portion of the organic matter in sedimentary rocks. It is insoluble in normal organic chemistry solvents because of the huge molecular mass of its component compounds....
s into hydrocarbon
Hydrocarbon

In organic chemistry, a hydrocarbon is an organic compound consisting entirely of hydrogen and carbon. With relation to chemical terminology, aromatic hydrocarbons or arenes, alkanes, alkenes and alkyne-based compounds composed entirely of carbon or hydrogen are referred to as "pure" hydrocarbons, whereas other hydrocarbons with bonded com...
s.

Theoretical reaction

This chemical reaction
Chemical reaction

A chemical reaction is a process that always results in the interconversion of chemical substances. The substance or substances initially involved in a chemical reaction are called reactants....
 is believed to be a time
Time

Time is a component of the measurement used to sequence events, to compare the durations of events and the intervals between them, and to quantify the motions of objects....
, temperature
Temperature

In physics, temperature is a physical property of a Physical system that underlies the common notions of hot and cold; something that feels hotter generally has the greater temperature....
 and pressure
Pressure

Pressure is the force per unit area applied to an object in a direction surface normal to the surface. Gauge pressure is the pressure relative to the local atmospheric or ambient pressure....
 dependent process which creates liquid and/or gaseous hydrocarbon Hc from primary kerogen X and can be summarised using the formula:

where X0 is the initial kerogen concentration
Concentration

In chemistry, concentration is the measure of how much of a given chemical substance there is mixed with another substance. This can apply to any sort of chemical mixture, but most frequently the concept is limited to homogeneous solutions, where it refers to the amount of solute in the solvent....
 and X(t) is the kerogen concentration at time t.

It is generally held that the dependence on pressure is negligible, such that the process of catagenesis can be given as a first-order differential equation
Differential equation

A differential equation is a mathematics equation for an unknown function of one or several variable that relates the values of the function itself and its derivatives of various orders....
:

where X is the reactant (kerogen) and ? is the reaction-rate constant which introduces the temperature-dependence via the Arrhenius equation
Arrhenius equation

The Arrhenius equation is a simple, but remarkably accurate, formula for the temperature dependence of the rate constant, and therefore, rate of a chemical reaction....
.

Important parameters

Several generally unrecognized but important controlling parameters of metamorphism have been suggested.
  • The absence or presence of water in the system, because hydrocarbon-thermal destruction is significantly suppressed in the presence of water.
  • Increasing fluid pressure strongly suppresses all organic-matter metamorphism.
  • Product escape from reaction sites, as lack of product escape retards metamorphism.
  • Increasing temperature as the principal driver of reactions.


Erroneous assumption

A large body of petroleum-geochemical data suggests these are not first-order reactions. This means that geologic time has a minimal role.
  • Experiments in closed, wet, pressurized systems are higher ordered reactions rather than first-order reactions.
  • Ample geologic evidence supports the possibility that the effect of geologic time may be overestimated. The hypothesis of geologic time being a controlling parameter was based upon rocks which are at low present-day burial temperatures, but it was later discovered in all those basins that high to extreme heat flow had previously existed in those basins. The influence of long geologic time on a rock formation increases the probability that high heat flows will occur in that formation.
  • Water suppresses thermal destruction of hydrocarbons, and hydrogen from water seems to be incorporated in kerogen.
  • Closed chemical systems suppress catagenesis. Regional shearing of fine-grained rocks opens up closed systems and strongly promotes both catagenesis and rock metamorphism at much lower burial temperatures than in unsheared rocks.
  • Increasing static fluid pressure strongly retards hydrocarbon generation. This has been found in experiments and helps explain the presence of hydrocarbon concentrations at depths where their composition would not otherwise be expected.
  • Many measurements of hydrocarbon content in sample rocks have been done at atmospheric pressure. This ignores the loss of large amounts of hydrocarbons during depressurization. Rock samples at atmospheric pressure have been measured at 0.11–2.13 percent of samples at formation pressure. Observations at well sites include fizzing of rock chips and oil films covering drilling mud
    Drilling mud

    In geotechnical engineering, drilling mud, also known as spud mud , is a drilling fluid used to drill boreholes into the earth. Often used while drilling oil well and natural gas wells and on exploration drilling rigs but can also be used for much simpler boreholes, such as water wells....
     pits.
  • Types of organic matter can not be ignored. Different types of organic matter have different chemical bonds, bond strength patterns, and thus different activation energies.
  • C15+ hydrocarbons are stable at much higher temperatures than predicted by first-order reaction kinetics.


See also

  • diagenesis
    Diagenesis

    In geology and oceanography, diagenesis is any chemical, physical, or biological change undergone by a sediment after its initial deposition and during and after its lithification, exclusive of surface alteration and metamorphism....
  • fossil fuel
    Fossil fuel

    Fossil fuels or mineral fuels are fossil source fuels, that is, carbon or hydrocarbons found in the earth?s Crust .Fossil fuel range from volatile materials with low carbon:hydrogen ratios like methane, to liquid petroleum to nonvolatile materials composed of almost pure carbon, like anthracite coal....
    s
  • metamorphic reaction
    Metamorphic reaction

    A metamorphic reaction is a chemical reaction that takes place during the geological process of metamorphism in an amalgamate of minerals that helps determine the final stable state of the resulting metamorphic rock....