Paleogeography and Paleo-Earth Systems in the Modeling of Marine Paleoproductivity: A Prerequisite for the Prediction of Petroleum Source Rocks

2017 
Abstract Mapping the distribution of productivity in ancient seas is a fundamental requirement for predicting the lateral variation in source rock quality, one of the main uncertainties for exploration in frontier basins, and is also required in the modeling of the carbon cycle in deep time. To construct a predictive tool designed to address this problem, a multifaceted approach based on paleogeographic mapping integrated with Earth-systems modeling has been devised and applied for a series of 18 time slices from the Early Paleozoic to Recent. Plate Wizard™ reconstructions were used as the basis for global paleogeographic mapping. Detailed paleotectonic and paleoenvironment maps were prepared using a global database of paleoenvironmental and lithofacies data compiled for this project. A novel method relating topography and bathymetry to plate tectonic environments was used in the construction of paleo digital elevation models (DEMs), and these DEMs were coupled with state-of-the-art paleo-Earth systems models (UK Meteorological Office HadCM3 paleoclimate model) run specifically for this project. The database also included climate proxies that were used to test the veracity of modeling results. Both upwelling and storms are major factors in the supply of nutrients to the photic zone, and low light levels are a significant seasonal limit on primary productivity, particularly at high latitudes. Each of these elements of the predictive model was derived from the HadCM3 model output. This approach also provides an understanding of paleogeographic and paleoclimatic geohistory that includes drainage basin evolution.
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