Bowland Shale Formation

Bowland Shale Formation
Stratigraphic range: Visean to Bashkirian
Type Formation
Unit of Craven Group
Underlies Millstone Grit Group or Morridge Formation
Overlies Pendleside Limestone Formation, Widmerpool Formation, Pentre Chert Formation, Cefn-y-Fedw Sandstone Formation, Hodderense Limestone Formation, Trawden Limestone Group, Malham Formation, Yoredale Group
Thickness 120-620 m
Lithology
Primary shale
Other limestone, sandstone
Location
Region northern England
Country United Kingdom
Extent Isle of Man, northern England, parts of North Wales and the Midlands
Type section
Named for Forest of Bowland

The Bowland Shale Formation is a Carboniferous geological formation of Asbian (Visean) to Yeadonian (Bashkirian) age. It is known from outcrop and subsurface borehole data in the north of England, the Isle of Man, parts of North Wales and the Midlands.[1] It is an organic-rich shale which, according to the British Geological Survey, is the source rock where "oil and gas matured before migration to conventional fields in the East Midlands and the Irish Sea",[2] for example, the Formby oil field.[3] The Bowland Shale, together with other organic-rich Carboniferous shale units, is being considered for exploitation for shale gas.[4]

In 2015, research by the University of Aberdeen discovered "high levels of selenium in rock samples from the Bowland shale"[5]

References

  1. Bowland Shale Formation. BGS Lexicon of Named Rock Units (Report). British Geological Survey. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  2. The Carboniferous Bowland Shale gas study: geology and resource estimation (PDF) (Report). DECC. 2013. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  3. The hydrocarbon prospectivity of Britain’s onshore basins. (PDF) (Report). DECC. 2010. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  4. The Unconventional Hydrocarbon Resources of Britain’s Onshore Basins - Shale Gas (PDF) (Report). 2014. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  5. Parnell, John; Brolly, Connor; Spinks, Sam; Bowden, Stephen (March 2016). "Selenium enrichment in Carboniferous Shales, Britain and Ireland: Problem or opportunity for shale gas extraction?". Applied Geochemistry. 66: 82–87. doi:10.1016/j.apgeochem.2015.12.008.

See also

Geology of Lancashire

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