Geochemical Characterization of
Cenomanian/Turonian 
Black
 Shales from the Tarfaya Basin (SW Morocco): Evidence 
for Palaeoenvironmental Controls on Early Sulfurization of Sedimentary Organic 
Matter
By
Sadat Kolonic1, J. S. Sinninghe Damsté2, M. E. Böttcher3, M. M. M. Kuypers3, W. Kuhnt4, B. Beckmann1, G. Scheeder5, T. Wagner1
(1) University of Bremen, D-28334 Bremen, Germany (2) Netherlands Inst. for Sea Research (NIOZ), Texel, Netherlands (3) Max Planck Institute (MPI), Bremen, Germany (4) University of Kiel, Kiel, Germany (5) German Federal Inst. for Geosciences & Natural Resources, Hannover, Germany
 Organic geochemical and petrological investigations were carried out on 
Cenomanian/Turonian 
black
 shales from the Tarfaya Basin (SW Morocco). High TOC 
contents up to 18wt.% and HI between 400 and 800 indicate hydrogen-rich 
organic-matter of type I-II kerogen that qualify these laminated 
black
 shale 
sequences as excellent 
oil
-prone source rocks. Low Tmax values 
obtained from Rock-Eval Pyrolysis (404-425oC) confirm an immature to 
early mature level of thermal maturation. Organic petrological investigations 
conducted on thin sections indicate that the kerogen is almost entirely composed 
of AOM. The formation of AOM is most likely related to intensive restructuring 
of labile biopolymers (lipids/carbohydrates) through incorporation of sulfur 
into the kerogen during early diagenesis. Total lipid analysis performed after 
desulfurisation of the total extract shows that the biomarkers predominantely 
comprise of short-chain n-alkanes (C16-C22) and 
long-chain (C25-C35) n-alkanes with no obvious 
odd-over-even predominance, steranes, hopanoids and acyclic isoprenoids. The 
presence of Isorenieratene derivatives indicates that dissolved sulfide 
had reached the photic zone at shallow water depths (~100m) during times of 
deposition. These conditions likely favoured intensive sulfurisation of the 
organic-matter. Flash pyrolysis GC-MS analysis of the kerogen indicates an 
aliphatic nature of the bulk organic-carbon. The vast majority of pyrolysis 
products are sulfur-containing components such as alkylthiophenes, 
alkenylthiophenes and alkybenzothiophenes. Abundant sulfurisation of the Tarfaya 
kerogen resulted from excess sulfate and metabolizable organic-matter over a 
limited availability of iron during early diagenesis. The observed variability 
in the intensity of sulfurisation of OM can be attributed to sea level-driven 
fluctuations in the paleoenvironment during sedimentation.
