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The oil window is the Choose one:_______

A. relatively narrow range of temperatures in which oil can form: 90°C to 160°C.
B. late Cenozoic, when all current oil was formed; any older oil has already decomposed.
C. depth in the Earth at which oil forms, roughly 40 to 50 km.
D. holes in the drill bit through which oil enters.

1 Answer

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Answer:

A. relatively narrow range of temperatures in which oil can form: 90°C to 160°C.

Step-by-step explanation:

The formation of oil begins in warm, shallow oceans that were present on the Earth millions of years ago. In these oceans, extremely small dead organic matter - classified as plankton falls to the floor of the ocean.

If temperatures of the kerogen are greater than 90°C but lower than 160°C, the kerogen is transformed into oil and natural gas. At temperatures higher than this, only natural gas (literally a gas that's a hydrocarbon) or graphite is formed. This temperature range is known as the "oil window".

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