2.3+3.2 conventional and unconventional coal, crude oil and gas
§2.3 Delfstoffen in soorten en maten
§2.3 World: Mineral resources
2.3+3.2 conventional fossil fuels
and unconventional coal, crude oil and gas
Get ready to take notes
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Slide 1: Diapositive
AardrijkskundeMiddelbare schoolvwoLeerjaar 3,4
Cette leçon contient 32 diapositives, avec quiz interactifs, diapositives de texte et 3 vidéos.
La durée de la leçon est: 50 min
Éléments de cette leçon
§2.3 Delfstoffen in soorten en maten
§2.3 World: Mineral resources
2.3+3.2 conventional fossil fuels
and unconventional coal, crude oil and gas
Get ready to take notes
Slide 1 - Diapositive
At the end of this lesson..
.. you understand the difference in formation between ores and fossil fuels
..you understand the difference between conventional and unconventional fossil fuel sources
..you can use terms like parent/source rock, reservoir rock and impermeable layer to explain how fossil fuels are stored in the earth
Slide 2 - Diapositive
At the end of this lesson..
.. you understand the difference in formation between ores and fossil fuels
..you understand the difference between conventional and unconventional fossil fuel sources
..you can use terms like mother/source rock, reservoir rock and impermeable layer to explain how fossil fuels are stored in the earth
Slide 3 - Diapositive
Which mineral resource might be formed here?
Slide 4 - Diapositive
Gold ore
Iron ore
Slide 5 - Diapositive
2.3 What are ores?
Minerals in which we find metal and from which we can extract a mineral resource.
So ....all ores are minerals, but not all minerals are ores .
Examples of ores are:
iron ore
cupper ore
silver ore
gold ore
Slide 6 - Diapositive
Climate → tropical
Carboniferous: 350-290 million ya
position → around equator
→ Tropical swamp
Slide 7 - Diapositive
Explain coalification to your neighbour
Plants → peat → lignite → coal
3 phases:
2
2. Due to further sedimentation, the peat is burried deeper and deeper. The deeper the layers, the higher the temperature. This leads to the transformation of peat into brown coal (lignite).
3
3. With further pressure and higher temperatures deeper in the crust, the lignite (brown coal) transforms into coal. These three phases together are the coalification proces.
1
1. Dead plant material is covered by water in a swamp. Due to a lack of oxygen, the plants do not decompose (rot). When layers are stacked, peat is formed.
Take note!
Slide 8 - Diapositive
Slide 9 - Vidéo
Crude oil forms from plankton in the oil window - temperature between 60 and 120 º C
Dead plankton floats to the bottom of the sea
Plankton in warm shallow seas
Thick layers of sediment on top of the plankton
Temperature and pressure increase in the plankton layer
Slide 10 - Question de remorquage
Formation oil in Mesozoic
- dead plankton bottom sea
- covered by layers like sand
- high temperature and pressure turned it into crude oil
Together gas was formed
Formation crude oil
Slide 11 - Diapositive
Take note!
Slide 12 - Diapositive
When was the basis for crude oil formed?
A
Jurassic
B
Carboniferous
C
Precambrian
D
Holocene
Slide 13 - Quiz
When was the basis for coal formed?
A
Jurassic
B
Carboniferous
C
Precambrian
D
Holocene
Slide 14 - Quiz
Coal
Crude oil
gas
plankton
peat
warm sea
tropical swamp
carbon
triassic jurassic cretaceous
folds & fractures though plate tectonics
Open pit mining
offshore
Slide 15 - Question de remorquage
Traditional/conventional resources
Fossil fuels --> exhaustible energy sources
Conventional oil and gas
'Easy' to extract
Conventional -> "usual" "normal"
oil & gas from reservoir rock
Take note!
Slide 16 - Diapositive
Slide 17 - Vidéo
conventional reserves
50 years? 100 years?
unconventional reserves
more effort, money and energy
Slide 18 - Diapositive
Slide 19 - Vidéo
What is the difference between conventional gas extraction and fracking for shale gas?
Slide 20 - Question ouverte
Shalegas, is not stuck in porous rock like sandstone (reservoir rock) by an impermeable layer like rock salt, but is trapped between layers of shale/slate (source rock)
Water, sand and chemicals break this rock and keep the new cracks open so gas can travel out
Slide 21 - Diapositive
01:49
What is an important feature of the impermeable layer?
A
Few pores
B
Very porous
Slide 22 - Quiz
05:50
What are the risks of fracking?
Slide 23 - Question ouverte
Explain: what is the difference between conventional & unconventional fossil fuels?
Slide 24 - Question ouverte
Unconventional resources
Still fossil fuels
Harder to extract
Unconventional -> "unusual" "not normal"
oil & gas from mother rock (shale gas) or mixed in with sediments (tar sand)
Take note!
Slide 25 - Diapositive
Drawbacks of tarsand extraction+fracking
Landscape & surface is harmed
Costs water and energy to extract (even more than conventional)
Contaminates soil & ground water
Earthquakes
Gas escapes when extracted -> direct green house gasses
Slide 26 - Diapositive
01:49
Gas in reservoirrock
Gas in parent rock
unconventional gas extraction
Slide 27 - Question de remorquage
01:19
What is tar sand?
A
Bitumen, which are blobs with oil around it
B
A sand & water mixture that contains crude oil
C
A mixture of sand, clay, water and bitumen
D
Sticky clay which you can get oil from
Slide 28 - Quiz
04:35
Why is extracting crude oil from the bitumen in tar sands more expensive than from a conventional oil field?
Slide 29 - Question ouverte
07:03
Name the three ways extraction of tar sands harm the natural environment
Slide 30 - Question ouverte
07:44
Give an argument why it is okay for the Canadian government to continue extracting crude oil in this way.