POSSIBLE INFLUENCE OF PLEISTOCENE GLACIATION AND GAS-HYDRATE FORMATION ON GAS PRODUCTION FROM LITTLE OSAGE SHALE, SE KANSAS
The gas in the Little Osage Shale apparently is a mixture of thermogenic and biogenic types, resulting in part from gamma-ray bombardment of organic matter in the highly organic shale, as well as from microbial reduction of carbon dioxide. The gas may have been held in the gas-hydrate state during the glacial episodes, perhaps to depths of 500 m or more. Many of the Little Osage reservoirs lie at depths shallower than this. Alternate freezing and thawing of gas-hydrates in glacial and interglacial episiodes may have contributed to fracture porsity in the shale reservoirs.
If this model is correct, there are other possible examples in north-central and northeastern States and southern Ontario where shallow Paleozoic reservoirs may have been affected by permafrost condiutions. This report is intended to provide suggestions for further research, not as a finished product