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Shales

Shales are fine-grained sedimentary rocks composed mainly of clay minerals and silt-sized particles. They are typically fissile, splitting easily along planes of weakness into thin sheets, and often show laminations a few millimeters to centimeters thick. The mineralogy commonly includes illite, kaolinite, chlorite, and variable amounts of quartz, feldspar, and organic matter. Shale forms from the gradual lithification of mud deposited in low-energy environments such as deep lakes, continental shelves, and offshore basins, where clay and silt settle and compact over time. The texture is often smooth and can appear gray, greenish, or black when rich in carbonaceous material; black shales may be enriched in kerogen and are of particular interest in petroleum geology.

Shales have low permeability and high plasticity when wetted, enabling them to act as cap rocks or

aquitards
in
sedimentary
sequences,
and
they
commonly
occur
atop
sandstones
or
coals
in
regions
of
deposition.
They
are
also
a
principal
source
rock
for
hydrocarbons
if
the
organic
matter
is
sufficiently
preserved
and
mature.
In
unconventional
petroleum
geology,
shale
gas
and
tight
oil
are
extracted
from
low-permeability
shales
using
hydraulic
fracturing
and
horizontal
drilling.
The
related
term
oil
shale
refers
to
kerogen-rich
shales
that
yield
oil
only
after
processing
(pyrolysis).