The thermal history of a basin is usually calibrated using thermal indicator data, including vitrinite reflectance and fission tracks[?] in the minerals apatite and zircon.
The temperatures undergone by rocks in a sedimentary basin are crucial when attempting to evaluate the quantity, nature and volume of hydrocarbons (fossil fuels) produced by diagenesis of kerogens[?] (a group of chemicals formed from the decay of organic matter).
Fourier's Law provides a simplified one-dimensional description of the variation in heat flow Q as a function of thermal conductivity k and thermal gradient dT/dz:
If the assumptions used to justify this simplified approximation (i.e. steady-state heat conduction, no convection or advection) are accepted, we define the simple 1D heat diffusion equation where temperature T at a depth z and time t is given by the equation:
Thermal history modelling attempts to describe the temperature history Tz,t and therefore requires a knowledge of the burial history of the stratigraphic layers which is obtained through the process of back-stripping[?].
See also: petroleum geology.
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