petroleum
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shale oil, in fossil fuel production, either a synthetic crude oil that is extracted from oil shale by means of pyrolysis or a naturally occurring crude oil that is extracted from underground shale deposits by means of fracking (hydraulic fracturing).

In the extraction of oil from oil shales, intense heat is used to break down a waxy organic matter called kerogen that is contained in the shale and thereby release liquid and gaseous hydrocarbons similar to those found in conventional petroleum. This type of synthetic crude is also called kerogen oil. Under present technology the oil is recovered by either of two processes. One involves mining and crushing oil shale and then transporting the rock to a processing plant where it is heated in special retorts to temperatures of about 500 °C (930 °F). The intense heat releases oil vapours from the rock, which liquefy in a series of condensers. The other process involves in situ extraction. In this technique an oil shale deposit is fractured with explosives, after which a mixture of gas and air is pumped into the deposit and ignited to heat the rock. (Other technologies such as electrical heating have also been tried.) The ensuing pyrolysis of the kerogen underground produces oil vapours that, upon condensing, are pumped out much like crude oil.

Crude oil is usually found in relatively coarse-grained, permeable, and porous sedimentary rocks such as sandstone and limestone, from which it can be drawn by using the natural formation pressure alone or, if necessary, some well-established technology such as mechanically pumping the oil out or forcing gas or liquid into the reservoir. In addition to such conventional production, newer technologies such as steerable drill bits, electronic sensors, and hydraulic fracturing have opened up so-called unconventional reservoirs composed of dense, impermeable “tight rock” such as shale or dolomite. Oil extracted from all such formations is known in the petroleum industry as “tight oil.” However, because it is most prominently recovered from shale formations, in a manner similar to shale gas, it is commonly referred to as shale oil.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Robert Curley.