Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

The Kingak shale of northern Alaska-regional variations in organic geochemical properties and petroleum source rock quality

January 1, 1984

The Kingak Shale, a thick widespread rock unit in northern Alaska that ranges in age from Early Jurassic through Early Cretaceous, has adequate to good oil source rock potential. This lenticular-shaped rock unit is as much as 1200 m thick near the Jurassic shelf edge, where its present-day burial depth is about 5000 m. Kingak sediment, transported in a southerly direction, was deposited on the then marine continental shelf. The rock unit is predominantly dark gray Shale with some interbeds of thick sandstone and siltstone. The thermal maturity of organic matter in the Kingak Shale ranges from immature (<0.6%R0) on the Barrow arch to postmature (>2.0%R0) in the Colville basin toward the south. Its organic carbon and hydrogen contents are highest in the eastern part of northern Alaska south of and around the Kuparuk and Prudhoe Bay oil fields. Carbon isotope data of oils and rock extracts indicate that the Kingak Shale is a source of some North Slope oil, but is probably not the major source. ?? 1984.

Publication Year 1984
Title The Kingak shale of northern Alaska-regional variations in organic geochemical properties and petroleum source rock quality
Authors L. B. Magoon, G. E. Claypool
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Organic Geochemistry
Index ID 70013700
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse