Albertite
Albertite is a variety of asphalt found in the Albert Formation in Albert County, New Brunswick, and in a deposit at Dingwall, in the north-east of Scotland. It is a type of solid hydrocarbon.
Albertite has a black colour, a resinous luster, and a hardness of 2½. It is less soluble in turpentine than the usual type of asphalt. It was from a mixture of albertite and pitch that kerosene was first distilled in 1846 by Abraham Gesner, a New Brunswick geologist who had heard stories of rocks that burned in the area and gave the material its first scientific study.
Origin
Albertite is formed from oil shale in which some of the hydrocarbons have been remobilised as liquid asphalt. The process is as follows:- Crude oil is produced from source rocks.
- The petroleum migrates through fractures and becomes trapped in the apex of an anticline.
- The lighter oils gradually leak out through the weakly permeable caprock.
- The bituminous residues are left behind in the fractures as albertite.
Occurrence
Extraterrestrial albertite has also been detected on the dwarf planet Ceres.