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      Quartz-Amethyst Hosted Hydrocarbon-Bearing Fluid Inclusions from the Green Ridge Breccia in the Snoqualmie Granite, North Cascades, WA, USA

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      Minerals
      MDPI AG

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          Abiogenic formation of alkanes in the Earth's crust as a minor source for global hydrocarbon reservoirs.

          Natural hydrocarbons are largely formed by the thermal decomposition of organic matter (thermogenesis) or by microbial processes (bacteriogenesis). But the discovery of methane at an East Pacific Rise hydrothermal vent and in other crustal fluids supports the occurrence of an abiogenic source of hydrocarbons. These abiogenic hydrocarbons are generally formed by the reduction of carbon dioxide, a process which is thought to occur during magma cooling and-more commonly-in hydrothermal systems during water-rock interactions, for example involving Fischer-Tropsch reactions and the serpentinization of ultramafic rocks. Suggestions that abiogenic hydrocarbons make a significant contribution to economic hydrocarbon reservoirs have been difficult to resolve, in part owing to uncertainty in the carbon isotopic signatures for abiogenic versus thermogenic hydrocarbons. Here, using carbon and hydrogen isotope analyses of abiogenic methane and higher hydrocarbons in crystalline rocks of the Canadian shield, we show a clear distinction between abiogenic and thermogenic hydrocarbons. The progressive isotopic trends for the series of C1-C4 alkanes indicate that hydrocarbon formation occurs by way of polymerization of methane precursors. Given that these trends are not observed in the isotopic signatures of economic gas reservoirs, we can now rule out the presence of a globally significant abiogenic source of hydrocarbons.
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            Methane-hydrogen gas seeps, Zambales Ophiolite, Philippines: Deep or shallow origin?

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              The effect of biodegradation on steranes and terpanes in crude oils

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                MBSIBI
                Minerals
                Minerals
                MDPI AG
                2075-163X
                September 2017
                September 19 2017
                : 7
                : 9
                : 174
                Article
                10.3390/min7090174
                121adb3a-bac9-49d3-85ae-f7df62c43ee2
                © 2017

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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