• Title/Summary/Keyword: Oregon Coast Range

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Hydrocarbon Source Rock Potential of Eocene Forearc and Subduction Zone Strata, Southern Oregon Coast Range, U.S.A. (미국 오레곤 남부 에오세 전호상 및 섭입대 퇴적층의 탄화수소 근원암 가능성)

  • Ryu, In-Chang
    • The Korean Journal of Petroleum Geology
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    • v.11 no.1 s.12
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    • pp.27-41
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    • 2005
  • The hydrocarbon source rock potential of the Eocene units in the southern Oregon Coast Range was evaluated by using the Rock-Eval pyrolysis. Most Eocene units in southern Oregon Coast Range are thermally immature and contain lean, gas-prone Type III kerogen. However, some beds(coals) are sufficiently organic-rich to be sources of biogenic and thermogenic methane discovered in numerous seeps. The overall hydrocarbon source rock potential of the southern Oregon Coast Range is moderately low. Several requirements for commercial accumulations of hydrocarbon, however, probably exist locally within and adjacent areas. Three speculative petroleum systems are identified. The first includes the southern part of the Oregon Coast Range near the border with the Mesozoic Klamath Mountains and is related to a proposed subduction zone maturation mechanism along thrust faults. The second is centered in the northern part of the range and may be associated with basin-centered gas in an over-pressured zone. The third occurs near the eastern border of the range where maturation is related heating by sills and migration of hydrothermal fluids associated with mid-Tertiary volcanism in the Western cascade arc.

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Study on the Copepod Ectoparasites of Sebastes melanops (Girard) and Sebastes crameri (Jordan) in Aquarium

  • Chun, Kae-Shik
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.366-367
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    • 2003
  • Nineteen rockfishes representing two species in the family Scorpaenidae were collected from Oregon Coast Aquarium in July 2003 and examined for parasitic copepods. The parasitic copepods were taken from the gills of Sebastes crameri and fins of S. melanops. With regard to the prevalence of copepod 22.2% of the fishes were infected by C. uncinata, and 30.0% by N. robusta. Intensity of infections of Clavella uncinata to Sebastes melanops, showed a range of 4 to 6 with a mean of 5.0 per fish while Neobrachiella robusta to S. crameri was 1 to 6 with a mean of 2.7.

Modeling of Hydrocarbon Generation and Expulsion in the Tyee Basin, Oregon Coast Range, USA (미국 북서부 오레곤주 타이분지 내 탄화수소 생성과 배출에 대한 모델링 연구)

  • Jang, Hee-Jeong;Ryu, In-Chang
    • Economic and Environmental Geology
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    • v.42 no.1
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    • pp.55-72
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    • 2009
  • The timing of hydrocarbon generation and expulsion from source rocks can be evaluated by reconstructing the geohistory of the basin using petroleum system modeling. The Tyee basin is generally considered having a high hydrocarbon generation potential For the southern part of the basin, the basin evolution from a structural and stratigraphic points of view, the thermal history, and the burial history were reconstructed and simulated using numerical tools of basin modeling. An evaluation of organic geochemistry for the potential source rocks and the possible petroleum systems were analysed to improve the understanding of the hydrocarbon charge of the basin. Organic geochemical data indicate that the undifferentiated Umpqua Group, mudstones of the Klamath Mountains, and coals and carbonaceous mudstones in the Remote Member and the Coquille River Member are the most potential gas-prone source rocks in the basin. The relatively high maturity of the southern Tyee basin is related to deep burial resulting from loading by the Coos bay strata. And the heating by intrusion from the western Cascade arc also affects to the high maturity of the basin. The maturation of source rocks, the hydrocarbon generation and expulsion were evaluated by means of basin modeling. The modeling results reveal that the hydrocarbon was generated in all potential source rocks and an expulsion only occurred from the Remote Member.