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  2. Sedimentary organic matter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedimentary_organic_matter

    Sedimentary organic matter includes the organic carbon component of sediments and sedimentary rocks. The organic matter is usually a component of sedimentary material even if it is present in low abundance (usually lower than 1%). Petroleum (or oil) and natural gas are particular examples of sedimentary organic matter.

  3. Organic-rich sedimentary rocks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organic-rich_sedimentary_rocks

    The new thought is that these ocean currents were slowed by blooms of microscopic marine primary producers, which allowed for the settlement of organic-rich sediments at the seafloor, producing many of the economically productive black shale beds that are present today. To this day it remains an intensely researched subject by scholars and ...

  4. Sapropel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sapropel

    The organic substance that is fixed at the bottom of the basin in the form of organogenic-mineral sediments (sapropels) is a product of the mass extinction of the plankton biomass as a result of the Black Sea flood. There is an excess of a huge amount of organic matter, which creates favorable conditions for the development of bacterial sulfate ...

  5. Palynology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palynology

    Organic palynofacies considers all the acid insoluble particulate organic matter (POM), including kerogen and palynomorphs in sediments and palynological preparations of sedimentary rocks. The sieved or unsieved preparations may be examined using strew mounts on microscope slides that may be examined using a transmitted light biological ...

  6. Source rock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Source_rock

    They are organic-rich sediments that may have been deposited in a variety of environments including deep water marine, lacustrine and deltaic. Oil shale can be regarded as an organic-rich but immature source rock from which little or no oil has been generated and expelled. [ 2 ]

  7. Kerogen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerogen

    Kerogen is a complex mixture of organic chemical compounds that make up the most abundant fraction of organic matter in sedimentary rocks. [12] As kerogen is a mixture of organic materials, it is not defined by a single chemical formula. Its chemical composition varies substantially between and even within sedimentary formations.

  8. Sedimentology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedimentology

    Folding in sediments is analysed with the principle of original horizontality, which states that sediments are deposited at their angle of repose which, for most types of sediment, is essentially horizontal. Thus, when the younging direction is known, the rocks can be "unfolded" and interpreted according to the contained sedimentary information.

  9. Remineralisation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remineralisation

    A quarter of all organic material that exits the photic zone makes it to the seafloor without being remineralised and 90% of that remaining material is remineralised in sediments itself. [1] Once in the sediment, organic remineralisation may occur through a variety of reactions. [5]