Black shales in the Holy Cross Mountains area of Poland provide a record of environmental change across the Ordovician-Silurian boundary. The changing depositional conditions have generated a variation in organic matter contents above and below the boundary. Investigating the organic constitution of these black shales has the potential to reveal how their organic matter contents were generated and how suitable these rocks and their lateral equivalents may be for exploitation as shale and Silurian rocks, these rocks were buried and subjected to thermal maturation. Rock Eval and Mustafa, K.A., Sephton M.A., Spathopoulos, F., Watson, J.S., Krzywiec, P. Organic geochemical characteristics of black shales across the Ordovician-Silurian boundary in the Holy Cross Mountains, Central Poland, Marine and Petroleum Geology, doi:10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2015.08.018. 2 biomarker thermal maturity parameters all indicate that the organic matter is mature and lies within the oil window. The Ordovician and Silurian shales have direct relevance to recent attempts to discover and exploit shale gas reservoirs in Poland. Our data and interpretations suggest that the relatively low TOC values (<2%) and low maturities for gas generation render these rocks unsuitable for commercial shale gas production. The progressive improvement in conditions for preserving organic matter across the Ordovician-Silurian boundary does, however, leave the possibility that more suitable deposits occur in Early Silurian rocks in other parts of the basin.
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