Bitumen-bearing fractures and vugs were investigated in the highly organic-rich Jordan oil shale (JOS) of Late Cretaceous–Eocene age, which has potential as a highly fractured, unconventional hydrocarbon play. Bitumen is present as macroscopically visible deposits, and as inclusions in the cement of abundant natural fractures and adjacent vugs. The frequency of bitumen occurrence in fractures closely correlates with total organic carbon (TOC) and burial depth. Petrographical and organic-geochemical analyses on bitumen samples extracted from fractures and their host-rock matrix show that the fracture-filling bitumen comprises indigenous low maturity hydrocarbons derived from the surrounding organic-rich oil shale and has not migrated from a deeper source. Maturity indicators imply that the oil shale is in the pre-oil generation stage of early catagenesis throughout the investigated area, but with a regional increase in thermal maturity from west to east as the result of greater maximum burial depth. Bitumen mobilization in the host rock was mainly controlled by vertical loading stress acting on the non-Newtonian bitumen phase in load-bearing configurations in the organic-rich matrix. Bitumen fractures were developed by hydraulic fracturing as the result of fluid overpressure in the organic matter. Overpressured bitumen has acted as a fracture driver, generating bitumen veins in both the organic-rich mudstones and the adjacent chert and silicified intervals.

Supplementary material: A summary of core data and photographs of the fracture bitumen and matrix bitumen are available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.4602290

Thematic collection: This article is part of the Naturally Fractured Reservoirs collection available at: https://www.lyellcollection.org/cc/naturally-fractured-reservoirs

You do not have access to this content, please speak to your institutional administrator if you feel you should have access.