Creation Science Rebuttals
The Flood Geology of Oil
Answers Magazine
Volume 2, Issue 1 (January - March 2007)
By
Jonathan Baker, M.S. Geology
Oil is an interesting subject in geology for many reasons, not the
least of which derives from its modern importance to domestic and
foreign policies on energy, environmental safety, climate change,
and perhaps even military action (at least in the public
perception). In other words, the study of oil directly affects us
all in some manner. As I see it, the sociological consequence is
twofold: on the one hand, geology gains public reputation as a vital
scientific discipline; on the other hand, everyone seems to have a
strong opinion—albeit commonly misinformed—on the topic of oil.
But lucky for you, I am not here as a political commentator. For
this post, I am more interested in discussing the geological origin
of oil and gas resources.
The study of oil’s origin and subsequent migration, accumulation,
and recovery falls under the discipline of petroleum geology, which
elegantly combines aspects of stratigraphy, sedimentology,
paleoclimatology, oceanography, geochemistry, geophysics, structural
geology, and even engineering. As such, it is also a complex and
in-depth subject, so I would summarize it in this way: 1) organic
matter is preserved through its burial in sediments, which undergo
pressure and heat at depth (like an oven); 2) oil is buoyant
compared to other fluids in the rocks and migrates through pore
spaces and fractures in the overlying rocks; 3) if migrating oil
meets an impermeable barrier (which can take on many forms), it will
be trapped and accumulate until the barrier is compromised. Simple,
right? Well, petroleum geologists must also be aware of several
guiding principles, which account for the fact that
only a tiny
percentage of Earth’s past life has produced oil:
1)
Organic matter decays in the presence of oxygen (this is
intuitive, especially for gardeners that produce their own compost).
Thus organic matter must be isolated from an oxic environment before
it returns to the atmosphere and ocean (and for reference, more than
99% of organic matter is oxidized and escapes burial in the modern
carbon cycle).
2)
Organic matter must undergo thermal maturation, but not too
much. This is much like understanding the basics of baking a
cake: too little heat and/or time and the cake is ruined; too much
heat and/or time and the cake is ruined. If organic-rich sediments
are not buried deeply enough or for long enough, the result is
immature kerogen, while burying the rocks too deeply or for too
long results in
postmature kerogen. Neither is economically
useful to us.
3)
Organic matter must be concentrated in the sediments. A
“good” source rock is one that contains more than 1% Total Organic
Carbon (TOC) by weight. This may not sound like much, but even 1%
TOC can turn a rock quite dark in color and produce sufficient
quantities of oil. Given that organic matter is readily oxidized in
a well-mixed water column, only specific environments allow for the
concentration of TOC.
4)
Oil must be able to migrate freely, but must also be trapped
in order to accumulate. If the oil can not escape its source
rock, it is buried further and becomes postmature (like a cake that
remains locked in the oven after the timer goes off). On the other
hand, oil will continue to migrate toward the surface unless trapped
by an impermeable boundary. As a fluid, oil disperses throughout the
pore spaces and fluids already present in overlying reservoir rocks.
The trap must not only be in place at the time of oil migration, but
its geometry must allow for the concentration of oil in the
sediments.
5)
The trap must not have been compromised since the time of
accumulation. Like the foundation of a house, petroleum traps
are subject to geological forces (like faulting from tectonic
movements, or uplift and erosion). In time, the likelihood that a
trap will continue to hold significant quantities of oil can
decrease substantially.
In summary, petroleum geology is about understanding a
system of
elements, in which timing is everything. From environmental
factors (e.g. nutrient supply, temperature, salinity, dissolved
oxygen and carbon dioxide) during the life cycle of marine organisms
to the burial history of rocks to seemingly unrelated, subsequent
sedimentary events (like the deposition of an impermeable rock
millions of years after the fact), the preservation of petroleum
systems is a delicate process. So at this point, I hope I have not
bored you with details. Rather, my intention was to communicate the
intricate nature of petroleum exploration, by which I am quite
fascinated.
And which, by the way, involves more than a bad aim with a rifle or
randomly drilling million-dollar holes in the ground.
Flood geology and the occurrence of oil
Until recently, I had not considered the implications of petroleum
systems for Flood geology (and I suspect I’m not the only one). My
search for a young-Earth response yielded a single full-length
article by Dr. Andrew Snelling, entitled
The Origin of Oil, which made some reference to an ICR article
by David McQueen, entitled
The Chemistry of Oil – Explained by Flood Geology. The former
provides a basic hypothesis of oil formation as a result of the
Flood, while the latter focuses on the presence of porphyrins (an
organic molecule) as evidence for catastrophic burial of sedimentary
rocks. Both argue that petroleum systems are better explained by the
Flood model, and that the conventional understanding of geology
cannot explain the range of geochemical data. In conjunction, they
form the following line of reasoning:
1) Many oils contain porphyrins, which is a type of organic compound
derived from plant and animal matter. It occurs in trace amounts (up
to 400 ppm), but its presence can be demonstrated clearly.
2) Organic matter containing porphyrins must rapidly escape
degradation (being oxidized), since porphyrins are unstable in the
presence of oxygen. Anoxic conditions are not common in the ocean
today, so geologists must consider areas of high sedimentation rate
(like deltas) to explain porphyrins in the geological record.
3) Deltas bury sediments more rapidly than other environments, but
contain abundant oxygen. Therefore, we should not expect to find
porphyrins preserved in deltaic sediments.
4) Conventional geology cannot explain the widespread preservation
of porphyrins. A catastrophic flood, however, would have rapidly
buried massive quantities of organic matter and preserved these
delicate molecules.
5) And since Flood geology can better explain the preservation of
key biomolecules, we need not comment on the thermal maturation of
organic matter (except that heat from burial during the Flood was
responsible), or subsequent migration of oil into trapped
reservoirs.
I admit, that last point was a bit tongue-in-cheek and results from
my disappointment with the authors’ oversimplification of petroleum
systems. Nonetheless, their case is in the form of a scientific
argument, which can be tested by outstanding evidence. Does the
argument hold? Have petroleum geologists ignored a catastrophic
origin of oil source rocks in favor of an evolutionary timescale?
Let’s take a look.
Distribution of porphyrins in petroleum reservoirs: a case for
catastrophism?
Neither young-Earth author is mistaken in noting that porphyrins are
commonly found in oil recovered from petroleum systems. In fact,
porphyrins were the first biomarkers to be discovered in oil, and
have since been used to interpret the source, depositional
environment, and maturity of oil (e.g. Sundaraman and Raedeke,
1993). How does this work? Porphyrins found in petroleum systems are
derived from chlorophyll in bacteria, algae, and other plant
material. The organic molecule is a type of ligand, which means that
its geometry and atomic structure allows for a metal cation, like
iron, to be bound in the center.
And if that doesn’t make sense, just imagine a donut (ligand) with a
ping-pong ball stuck in the center (metal cation).
In petroleum systems, porphyrins are most commonly bound to nickel
or vanadium (actually, a vanadyl ion: VO
2+),
and the relative abundance of each reflects whether the depositional
environment was oxidizing or reducing (e.g. Chen and Philp, 1991;
Huseby et al., 1996). Vanadyl porphyrins are more stable, for
example, in reducing conditions, where nickel preferentially bonds
to sulfur and free cations become less abundant (Chen and Philp,
1991). Thus a relatively high ratio of vanadyl porphyrin vs.
nickel-bound porphyrin suggests that the source rock was deposited
in a low-oxygen marine environment, while the opposite relationship
may indicate a deltaic/shelf environment, or a terrestrial source of
organic matter (Premovic et al., 1998). As the sediments are buried
more deeply, the temperatures increases and both types of porphyrin
begin to break down into simpler organic compounds. Again, vanadyl
porphyrins are more stable at higher temperature (Huseby et al.,
1996), so their enrichment against nickel-bound porphyrins and
preferential depletion versus more stable algal lipids can be used
as a proxy for thermal maturity (e.g. Sundararaman and Raedeke,
1993). This method is particularly important in source rocks of
marine origin, since the most common maturity indicators (Vitrinite
Reflectance – Ro, and Thermal Alteration Index – TAI) use
terrestrial (land-derived) organic matter.
Although the interpretation is not always straightforward (Premovic
and Jovanovic, 1997), geologists have long been able to interpret
and
predict the distribution of oil-related porphyrins
according conventional geological timescales. So why Dr. Snelling
and Mr. McQueen focus on the preservation of porphyrins as evidence
in their favor? Consider the following statement from Dr. Snelling:
“...experiments have shown that plant porphyrin breaks down in as
little as three days when exposed to temperatures of only 410°F
(210°C) for only 12 hours. Therefore, the petroleum source rocks and
the crude oils generated from them can’t have been deeply buried to
such temperatures for millions of years.”
On this point, Dr. Snelling’s assessment is spot on: exposure
to high temperatures for any significant period of time would
deplete any petroleum reservoir of porphyrins. Even vanadyl
porphyrins of marine origin are only thermally stable up to ~300°C
(Premovic and Jovanovic, 1997), so how do conventional geologists
solve the dilemma?
It’s simple:
they don’t, because there is no dilemma.
Oil is produced at temperatures between ~60°C–150°C. In the average
tectonic setting, this translates to burial between 2.4–6 km below
the Earth’s surface. If a source rock is buried much deeper or
exposed to higher temperatures (e.g. from magmatic intrusions or
hydrothermal fluids), then the rock quickly becomes postmature and
will not produce any usable oil. Actually, the argument is easily
turned against Dr. Snelling and Mr. McQueen. This range of
temperatures is called the
oil window, and
demonstrates the predictive power of petroleum geology. If one can
estimate the
time at which the source rock reached the oil
window (that is, using the geologic timescale), one can predict when
and
where the oil migrated. Does the method work? I would
suggest that more than
100 billion barrels of burnt oil and the continued profits of
Exxon, Chevron, and others clearly demonstrate the method’s
validity.
Dr. Snelling also notes that “experiments have produced a
concentration of 0.5% porphyrin (of the type found in crude oils)
from plant material in just one day.” Since immature kerogen with
relatively high concentrations of porphyrins contain
at most
400 ppm porphyrin (12.5 times less), Flood geologists must rather
explain the
rarity of metal-bound porphyrins in petroleum
systems, assuming that the organic material was buried
catastrophically less than 6,000 years ago and never exceeded 60°C
(as indicated by independent maturity and temperature proxies).
Ocean anoxia and the preservation of organic matter
Both Dr. Snelling and Mr. McQueen argue that anoxic conditions are
too rare to account for the massive quantities of preserved organic
matter. Rather than elucidating whether this is actually true, they
engage in a
hook, line, and sinker tactic by noting that many
authors cite high sedimentation rates as a probable cause for
organic-rich sediments. Mr. McQueen writes,
‘If a "high sedimentation rate" will preserve organic material,
a catastrophic sedimentation rate, such as we envision for the
worldwide Flood, would uproot, kill, and bury organic material
so rapidly as to cut the porphyrins off from oxidizing agents
which would destroy them in the ocean water.’
Unfortunately, he misunderstands the mechanism behind the original
authors’ reasoning. First, dissolved-oxygen content rapidly
decreases below the sediment-water interface due to microbial
activity (i.e. bacteria eating dead organic matter to produce
methane, CO
2,
and/or H
2S),
even when the overlying water is oxygenated. Yes, deltaic
environments are oxidizing in the water column, but this actually
results in poorer quality of oil compared to deeper-water settings,
not the absence of oil. Second, catastrophic burial of organic
matter in well-mixed ocean water would actually leave sufficient
oxidants to chemically degrade most of the organic matter, thus Mr.
McQueen’s extrapolation is unwarranted speculation. Third, most
organic-rich rocks show geochemical (biomarker) evidence for
thorough bacterial “eating” or reworking of the organic matter. If
the sediments were buried catastrophically to several kilometers’
depth, how did this process occur?
Fourth, the preservation of organic matter depends on several
factors, of which sedimentation rate and dissolved oxygen content
are only two: local productivity, nutrient supply, clay fraction of
sediments, source of organic matter, and bacterial population also
play a major role. Each factor varies in importance for different
depositional environments. For example, in a deltaic environment,
the input of terrestrial organic matter, amount of clay minerals
(which bond to organic molecules), and overall sedimentation rate
are most important. In continental shelf and slope settings (further
from the coast), primary productivity of marine organisms and the
extent of the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) is most important.
And speaking of the oxygen minimum zone...
Dr. Snelling claims that “[Anoxic] environments are too rare to
explain the presence of porphyrins in all the many petroleum
deposits found around the world. The only consistent explanation is
the catastrophic sedimentation that occurred during the worldwide
Genesis Flood.” But how rare are they? Well, to be sure, most of the
ocean contains sufficient oxygen to degrade organic matter. Dr.
Snelling fails to mention, however, what every introductory geology
student already knows about the ocean: that in a small zone between
~200–1,000 m, the water column is
anoxic due to the
active degradation of organic matter. Anoxia is strongest in areas
where upwelling delivers fresh nutrients to heterotrophic marine
organisms in this zone (such as the Peruvian or West African coasts)
and is less prevalent in areas of downwelling (such as the East
Atlantic coast). Therefore, sediments deposited on the western
continental shelf (especially near the equatorial zone) can preserve
ample organic matter, porphyrins included. As an aside, this means
that if petroleum geologists know the paleogeography (ancient
position of the continents), they can predict where upwelling was
the strongest and better find oil. Along the Peruvian coastline, the
anoxic zone extends more than 1,000 km across the shelf.
For reference, a source rock that extends for one thousand
kilometers in any direction is spelled with a capital $.
Not only is Dr. Snelling in error about this basic geological
feature, he also ignores paleoceanographic conditions during the
height of source rock generation (i.e. the chemistry of the ocean
when most our oil was deposited as organic-rich sediments). Ocean
anoxic events during the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods resulted in
widespread deposition of organic-rich sediments, which have produced
some of the highest quality oils to date. Of course, Dr. Snelling
may reject the geologic timescale and geochemical interpretation of
these events, but he cannot make the claim that conventional geology
fails to explain the widespread preservation of organic matter in
ancient deposits.
Once again, the argument can be turned against the young-Earth
authors: how does Flood geology explain the widespread occurrence of
Cretaceous black shales,
which contain up to 20% TOC sourced from
marine organic matter? Catastrophically buried forests may
‘begin’ to explain coal seams, but have nothing to do with
geochemically distinct, marine black shales. Furthermore, it is
impossible to hydrodynamically concentrate marine organic matter in
sediments. On the other hand, the accumulation of organic matter in
sediments is readily explained through clay-adsorption at moderately
low sedimentation rates (less than a few cm per year) under anoxic
conditions.
Petroleum systems involve more than oil and gas generation
After employing a number of misleading arguments to convince the
reader that one should not expect to find oil reservoirs on the
conventional geologic timescale, Dr. Snelling sweeps away the
aspects of petroleum geology most challenging to his position in a
simple, anecdotal conclusion. He writes:
“All the available evidence points to a recent catastrophic origin
for the world’s vast oil deposits...during the global Flood
cataclysm...forests were uprooted and swept away. Huge masses of
plant debris were rapidly buried in what thus became coal beds, and
organic matter generally was dispersed throughout the many
catastrophically deposited sedimentary rock layers...[which] became
deeply buried as the Flood progressed. As a result, the temperatures
in them increased sufficiently to rapidly generate crude oils and
natural gas from the organic matter in them. These subsequently
migrated until they were trapped in reservoir rocks and structures,
thus accumulating to form today’s oil and gas deposits.”
His concluding paragraph is filled with gratuitous assertions and
leaves many important questions unanswered. A more detailed
explanation is warranted in the future, so I will comment briefly on
the major points.
1) As mentioned, c
atastrophic burial does not explain the
occurrence of petroleum reservoirs, where bacterial degradation,
partial oxidation, and long timescales played an important part in
turning a biomass much larger than the present-day biosphere into
high-quality fuel. Nor does it explain the specific geochemistry,
which is the direct consequence of these processes. In essence, Dr.
Snelling is claiming that since he can use a microwave to fully cook
a piece of fresh beef in minutes, you shouldn’t assume that the $50,
prime-cut, seasoned and aged prime rib on your plate actually took
any longer to prepare. You can taste the difference when it comes to
good cooking; so can petroleum geochemists when it comes to oil and
gas.
2) Theories about burying floating forests, or uprooting terrestrial
forests, only go so far in petroleum geology, since
many oil and
gas reservoirs were sourced from marine organic matter. Can
terrestrial plant material produce Type I and Type II kerogens? And
if not, how was marine organic matter concentrated under
catastrophic conditions? Much oil and gas (and the highest quality
thereof) is produced from marine algae, phytoplankton, and diatoms,
all of which thrive in the surface ocean. How does the Flood
geologist account for high TOC in certain types of rocks (shales)
and not others (adjacent cap carbonates)? Or in certain types of
shales but not others, without invoking a valid sorting mechanism
for suspended, single-celled organisms?
3) On a similar note, biomarkers (like porphyrins) are vital to the
study of petroleum geology, because they tell us about the source of
the oil (marine vs. terrestrial; diatom vs. algal; angiosperm vs.
gymnosperm).
Evolutionary theory and the geologic timescale
provide age constraints on certain biomarkers, and allow us to make
predictive assessments of petroleum systems. In other words, if
one finds biomarkers from angiosperms, the source rock can not be
older than Cretaceous, when angiosperms evolved/diversified; if one
finds biomarkers from diatoms, the source rock can not be older than
Jurassic, when diatoms first evolved/diversified. Porphyrins are
derived from chlorophyll, and should be found in organic-rich
sediments of all ages (provided the rocks are not postmature). Such
predictions are verified when various petroleum geologists use
multiple independent methods to link a petroleum reservoir
empirically to its source rock. The same goes for thousands of other
biomarkers, which testify to the validity of the geologic timescale
and evolutionary theory over against a catastrophic explanation.
4) For organic-rich sediments to produce oil, they must reach a
temperature within the oil window (~60°C-150°C). If this occurs
through slow burial, temperature increases systematically with
depth, since the upper mantle provides a conductive heat source for
the crust.
If a bulk of sedimentary rocks were deposited during
the Flood in the last 4,000-6,000 years, what is the heat source?
Imagine taking a hot pan and adding a thin layer of pancake batter
every hour for a full day. After your stack is several inches tall,
there will be a gradient in temperature from the bottom of the stack
(which is in contact with the hot plate) to the top (which is cooled
by the room-temperature air). There will also be a gradient of
“doneness”, from burnt pancake to raw batter. This process resembles
the conventional geologic timescale, where there is ample time for
equilibration of the temperature gradient and cooking of the
“batter”. On the other hand, if you instantly pour 3 inches of
pancake batter into an empty pot on the burner and checked it after
only 30 seconds, what would the result be? The edges might be burnt,
but there will not have been enough time for heat to reach even the
middle of the batter. As I see it, Flood geologists are faced with a
serious dilemma: if the upper mantle provided heat to buried
sediments, then not nearly enough time has passed for the geothermal
gradient to equilibrate in the thick crust (especially if the
sediments were soft and water-saturated, like in the Flood model);
if hydrothermal fluids provided a heat source during burial (this
would also be reflected in oxygen/helium isotopes in cements, but
it’s not), then why does the oil window accord roughly to the modern
thermal gradient and why can immature oils still be found at depth?
In other words, the Flood geology model would predict a majority of
oil and gas to be severely “underdone” or “overdone”. In the former
case, the oven came on during the Flood but is still on preheat; in
the latter case, someone tried to reduce the cooking time by
tripling the temperature. But neither explanation predicts what is
seen in petroleum systems today.
5) Lastly, once oil and gas are generated, they need time to migrate
through the rocks and accumulate in traps. Yet Dr. Snelling has not
divulged just how long this process takes in rocks under pressure.
Secondary porosity (cracks and fissures) speed up the intermediate
process, but oil must still travel through and within the
low-permeability source rock, then over a great distance (sometimes
several kilometers) before accumulating in a higher permeability
reservoir rock.
This process alone can take many thousands of
years or more, even in a pure quartz sandstone (as modeled by
modified groundwater equations and observed in oil seeps).
Conclusion
Petroleum geology provides an elegant, multidisciplinary approach to
finding one of the world’s most prized resources. Regardless of your
opinion of the oil industry, its success is testimony to the
validity of the conventional geologic timescale, evolutionary
theory, and theories of oil generation, maturation, migration, and
accumulation over multi-million-year timescales. This stands over
against the proposed catastrophic explanations of petroleum systems
offered by Dr. Snelling and Mr. McQueen, who overlooked many basic
geological facts to convince their readers that the occurrence of
petroleum systems supports Flood geology. As it stands, Flood
geology is neither explanatory of outstanding geochemical evidence
from oil and gas resources nor predictive of evidence in the field.
Notwithstanding a major restructuring of existing theories by Flood
geologists, oil and gas resources provide a powerful argument
against a young-Earth interpretation of geologic history.
For the record
Petroleum-associated porphyrins might be structurally similar to
heme in human hemoglobin, but are chemically distinct. There is no
evidence that oil reservoirs contain trace remnants of “ancient,
antediluvian human blood,” as Mr. McQueen postulates as an example
of the predictive power of Flood geology. He is correct in noting
that scientific hypotheses may be generated from the Flood model,
but I would argue that they have already been falsified.
References cited:
Berkel, G.J, and Filby, R.H., 1987, Generation of Nickel and Vanadyl
porphyrins from kerogen during simulated catagenesis: American
Chemical Society Symposium Series, p. 110-134.
Chen, J.H., and Philp, R.P., 1991, Porphyrin distributions in crude
oils from the Jianghan and Biyang basins, China: Chemical Geology,
v. 91, p. 139-151.
Huseby, B., Barth, T., Ocampo, R., 1996, Porphyrins in Upper
Jurassic source rocks and correlations with other source rock
descriptors: Organic Geochemistry, v. 25, p. 273-294.
Premovic, P.I., and Jovanovic, L.S., 1997, Are vanadyl porphyrins
products of asphaltene/kerogen thermal breakdown?: Fuel, v. 76, p.
267-272.
Sundararaman, P., and Raedeke, L.D., 1993, Vanadyl porphyrins in
exploration: maturity indicators for source rocks and oils: Applied
Geochemistry, v. 8, p. 245-254
This article was originally posted by Jonathan Baker on his blog,
Questioning Answers in Genesis.