Mid-Continent middle Pennsylvanian rocks are a complex assemblage of coal-cyclothem lithologies. Organic-matter-rich rocks in the section include coals (33 to 76% organic carbon—org. C), marine, dark-gray to gray-black shales (1 to 8% org. C), and laminated, phosphatic black shales (4 to 28% org. C). Organic matter in these rocks came mostly from peat swamps, as shown by similarities between coal and shales in organic petrography, hydrogen (H) and oxygen (O) indices (Rock-Eval pyrolysis), pyrolysis-gas chromatographic analyses, and gas chromatographic analyses of saturated hydrocarbon fractions of CHCl3 extracts. A halocline, resulting from the river waters that transported the dissolved and fine particulate organic matter from the extensive swamps, may have been the principal mechanism for restricting circulation in the shaledepositing environments.
Some organic geochemical properties vary significantly within and between the coal and shale lithologies, reflecting inferred differences in intensity of depositional and diagenetic anoxic conditions and degree of thermal maturation. For shales with comparable thermal maturities, deposition and diagenesis under more intense anoxic conditions result in higher org. C, P, U, Se, Mo, V, Ni, Ag, and Cr contents, H indices, saturate/aromatic and NSO/asphaltene ratios in CHCl3 extracts, and lower O indices, pristane/phytane ratios, and organic carbon δ13C values (more negative by 1 to 2 per mil). H and O indices in coals resemble those of shales deposited under the most intense anoxic conditions. In contrast, saturate/aromatic, NSO/asphaltene, and pristane/phytane ratios in coal extracts, trace- and minorelement contents, and organic carbon δ13C of coals resemble shales deposited under relatively oxic conditions. A few coals are overlain by black phosphatic shales and have been subjected to more intense anoxic diagenesis. These coals have higher U, Se, Mo, V, Ni, and Cr contents, lower pristane/phytane ratios, and more negative (~ 1 per mil) organic carbon δ13C values. When normalized to n-C18, most pristane/phytane variability in all rock types appears to be related to variation in amounts of pristane, phytane content remaining relatively constant. With increased degree of thermal maturity, (1) H and O indices decrease in both coals and shales; (2) total bitumen/org. C and pristane/phytane ratios increase in shales but decrease in coals; and (3) saturate/aromatic ratios increase significantly only in shales that were subject to high levels of anoxic diagenesis. The black phosphatic shales contain extractable organic matter that is most similar to Cherokee crude oils from northeast Oklahoma and southeast Kansas.