Salt Systems of the Earth (eBook, ePUB)
Distribution, Tectonic and Kinematic History, Salt-Naphthids Interrelations, Discharge Foci, Recycling
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
Salt Systems of the Earth (eBook, ePUB)
Distribution, Tectonic and Kinematic History, Salt-Naphthids Interrelations, Discharge Foci, Recycling
- Format: ePub
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
The most comprehensive and in-depth study of the formation, practical applications, history, and natural recycling of salt, including the global and geological implications of its formative process, natural movement, and development in the Earth's subsurface. Like water, salt is one of the most commonplace items in our everyday lives. From the omnipresent shaker that you see on every table in every restaurant, to the ocean water we swim in, salt is something that we rarely think about. But there is much more to the story of salt than most people think. Not only is salt a natural resource that…mehr
- Geräte: eReader
- mit Kopierschutz
- eBook Hilfe
- Größe: 64.48MB
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
- Seitenzahl: 714
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. November 2018
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781119479291
- Artikelnr.: 56888365
- Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
- Seitenzahl: 714
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. November 2018
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781119479291
- Artikelnr.: 56888365
Introduction 1
PART 1 Salts in Earth's Crust: Composition, Tectonic and Kinematic History,
Salt-Naphthide Parakinesis 11
1 Geological-Tectonic Review of World Salt-Bearing Basins 13
1.1 Introduction 13
1.2 Salt-Bearing Basins of Eurasia 25
1.2.1 Geotectonic and Mineragenic Review 25
1.2.2 Brief Geological-Mineragenic Description of the Largest Salt-Bearing
Basins 31
1.2.2.1 Salt-Bearing Basins of Europe 31
1.2.2.2 Asian Salt-Bearing Basins 72
1.3 Salt-Bearing Basin of North America 105
1.3.1 Geotectonic and Mineragenic Review 105
1.3.2 Brief Geological-Mineragenic Description of the Largest Salt-Bearing
Basins 107
1.4 Salt-Bearing Basins of South America 128
1.4.1 Geotectonic and Mineragenic Review 128
1.4.2 Brief Geological-Mineragenic Description of the Largest Salt-Bearing
Basins 129
1.5 Salt-Bearing Basins of Africa and Arabia 136
1.5.1 Geotectonic and Mineragenic Review 136
1.5.2 Brief Geological-Mineragenic Description of the Largest Salt-Bearing
Basins 138
1.6 Salt-Bearing Basins of Australia 154
1.6.1 Geotectonic and Mineragenic Review 154
1.6.2 Brief Geological-Mineragenic Description of the Largest Salt-Bearing
Basins 156
1.7 Conclusion 162
2 Historical-Geodynamic Analysis of the Spatial and Temporal Distribution
of the World's Salt-Bearing Basins 163
2.1 Introduction 163
2.2 Fundamentals of the Geodynamic Analysis 164
2.2.1 Terminology 165
2.2.2 Geodynamic Classification 166
2.2.3 Geodynamic Types of Salt-Bearing Basins, their Diagnostic Indications
and Lithogeodynamic Models 171
2.3 On the Preservation of Salt Bodies and Information Value of the
Geologic Record 175
2.4 Neo-Geodynamic Salt-Bearing Basins of the World 177
2.4.1 Overview and Analysis 177
2.4.2 The General Picture of Placing Neo-Geodynamic Salt-Bearing Basins in
the Recent Kinematic Structure of Earth (Analysis Results) 198
2.5 Geodynamic History of the Salt Accumulation 201
2.6 Patterns in the Geodynamic Placement of Salt-Bearing Basins 213
2.6.1 Salt Accumulation Periodicity 213
2.6.2 Orderliness in the Spatial Placement of Salt-Bearing Objects 214
2.6.3 Regional Features of the Salt-Bearing Objects' Age Distribution 215
2.6.4 Geodynamic "Specialization" of Salt Accumulation Epochs 218
2.6.5 Geochemical "Specialization" of Salt Accumulation Epochs 219
2.6.6 Inheritance in the Placement of Salt-Bearing Objects 220
2.7 Conclusions 222
3 Kinematic History of the Salts in Earth's Crust 227
3.1 Morpho-Kinematic Groups of Salt Bodies 227
3.2 Salt Bodies of the Salt-Tectonic Group 229
3.3 Salt Bodies of the Orthotectonic Group 236
3.3.1 Salt Behavior Under Conditions of Active Tectonics 236
3.3.2 Morphotectonic Features of Salt Bodies in the Nappe-Folded Areas 239
3.3.3 The Salt Prevalence in Folded Areas of Various Ages 242
3.4 Kinematic Evolution of Salt Bodies in the Processes of Tectonic
Development 247
3.5 Problems Associated with the Formation of Nappe-Like Salt Bodies 249
3.6 Conclusions 253
PART 2 Salt in the System of Injection Formations. A Recycling Model of the
Salt- and Naphthide-Accumulation 257
4 Earth's Ascending Injection Systems and Injection Sedimentary Formations
259
4.1 Participation Problem of the Ascending Discharges in the Sedimentation
259
4.2 Ascending Discharges in Sedimentation Areas: Objects, Typification 265
4.2.1 System of Injection Discharges 265
4.2.2 Fluids, their Discharge Foci, Influence Aureoles (The Fluid Group
Proper) 267
4.2.3 Flowing Rock Masses and their Discharge Foci (Lithokinetic Group) 275
4.2.4 Parakineses of the Injection Discharges 278
4.3 The Recent Picture of Ascending Discharge Distribution 282
4.3.1 Occurrence of Recent Discharges 282
4.3.2 The Scale of a Recent Input of Injection Material in the Depositional
Environments 284
4.3.3 Geodynamic Environments of Recent Discharge Foci Placement and their
Endogenous Parameters 291
4.3.4 The Environment-Forming Role of Ascending Discharges 295
4.4 Ecological and Sedimentary Consequences of the Recent Ascending
Discharges 304
4.4.1 The Consequences of Fluid Discharges 305
4.4.2 The Consequences of Lithokinetic Discharges 311
4.4.3 General Model of the Injection-Depositional Processes 313
4.4.4 A Coordinated Typification of Injection Discharges and of their
Injection-Depositional Derivatives 318
4.5 Sedimentary Consequences of Past Ascending Discharges 319
4.5.1 Sedimentary Derivatives and Indications of the Fluid Paleo-Discharges
320
4.5.2 Sedimentary Derivatives and Features of Lithokinetic Paleo-Discharges
326
4.5.3 Injection-Depositional Parageneses 327
4.5.4 Regional Examples of the Injection-Depositional Formations 328
4.6 Combination of the Injection-Depositional Sediment Types with
Background Ones 335
4.7 Conclusions. Expanded Option of a Classification of Sedimentogenesis
Types 335
5 Regeneration (Recycling) Salt Accumulation Model 341
5.1 Status of the Salt Origin Problem 341
5.2 The Substance of the Regeneration Model and Examples of its
Implementation 346
5.3 Geological Prerequisites of the Model Implementation 348
5.3.1 The Material Prerequisites 349
5.3.2 The Geodynamic and Landscape Prerequisites 351
5.4 The Tectono-Kinematic Succession and the Brine-Salt Discharge Types 353
5.5 Sedimentation-Accumulation Consequences of Brine-Salt Discharges 356
5.5.1 General Succession of Processes in Sedimentation Basins 356
5.5.2 Chemogenic-Accumulative Processes (Interaction between Brines and the
Basin Water) 360
5.5.3 Extrusive-Accumulative Processes (Consequences of the Salt Mass
Discharge) 364
5.5.4 Discharge Consequences in Continental Environments 367
5.6 Discussion of the Regeneration Model 369
5.6.1 Evaluation of the Model's Genetic Positions and the Correspondence of
the Real Salt-Bearing Bodies Features with the Sedimentation Consequences
of the Model 369
5.6.2 Mineragenic Aspects of the Model 373
5.6.3 Evidence of the Regeneration Processes' Participation in the
Formation of Salt Bodies 374
5.6.4 On the Causes of Underestimating the Role of Regeneration Processes
in the Salt Accumulation 376
5.6.5 The Salt Dating Problem 378
5.6.6 On Some Contradictions of the Evaporite Salt Accumulation Models 379
5.6.7 On the Role of Exhalation Processes in the Salt Accumulation 380
5.7 On the Evolution of the Salt Accumulation Scale and Mechanism in
Earth's Geologic History 381
5.7.1 The Stratigraphic Placement of Salt 381
5.7.2 On the Interrelations of Various Salt Accumulation Mechanisms and
Their Evolution in Earth's Geologic History 383
5.8 Conclusions 386
PART 3 Natural Salt Accumulation Belts and Nodes (Examples) 389
6 Belts of Salt-Dome Basins along the Margins of Young Oceans 391
6.1 Introduction 391
6.2 Arrangement of Salt-Dome Basins along the Margins of Young Oceans 392
6.3 Geological Features of Marginal Oceanic Salt-Dome Basins 397
6.4 Geodynamic Position and History of Marginal Oceanic Salt-Dome Basins
398
6.5 Morphokinematic Features of Salt Tectonics in Marginal Oceanic Basins
403
6.6 Specific Conditions and Mechanisms of Salt Tectonics in Marginal
Oceanic Basins 405
6.7 Geodynamic Settings of Salt Tectonics in Marginal Oceanic Basins 407
6.8 The Salt Tectonics Influence on the Structure of Sedimentary Sequences
of Marginal Oceanic Basins 409
6.9 Petroleum Resource Potential of Marginal Oceanic Salt-Dome Basins 410
6.10 Conclusions 411
7 The Mexican Salt-Oil Node and Center of Natural and Geo-Technogenic Oil
Catastrophes 413
7.1 Introduction 413
7.2 Geologic, Petroleum and Fluid-Dynamic Particulars of the Mexican Basin
414
7.3 Salt and Petroleum-Bearing Subsurface of the Mexican Basin 418
7.4 Live Floor of the Gulf of Mexico 422
7.5 Accidents on the Oil Wells as Geotechnogenic Phenomenon 428
7.6 Emergency Oil Spills and Naphtha Sedimentogenesis 432
7.7 Largest Salt-Petroleum Basins as Global Centers of Hope and Hazard 434
7.8 On the Elimination of Oil Spills' Ecologic Consequences 436
7.9 Conclusions 439
8 Mediterranean Salt-Bearing Super-Giant.The Messinian Salinity Crisis
Enigma 441
8.1 Introduction 441
8.2 Key Features of the Geology and Paleogeodynamic History 443
8.2.1 Major Geology Features 443
8.2.2 Paleogeodynamic History 447
8.3 Salt Bearing of the Subsurface. Current Distribution of the Messinian
and Triassic Salts 449
8.3.1 The Messinian Salt Sequences 450
8.3.2 The Triassic Salts (Modern Distribution) 455
8.3.3 The Current Spatial Interrelations between the Triassic and Miocene
Salts 461
8.4 The Kinematic History of the Triassic Salts an their Distribution in
the Pre-Messinian Time 465
8.5 The Messinian Crisis of Salinity. Existing Concepts of the Messinian
Salts Origin 469
8.6 The Messinian Events as a Realization of the Regeneration Model 473
8.6.1 The Geological Events of the Messinian Time 475
8.6.2 The Processes of the Brine-Salt Masses Discharge 479
8.6.3 The Processes of Salt Accumulation 479
8.6.4 Analysis of Prerequisites and Events that had Facilitated the
Realization of the Regeneration Model 480
8.7 A discussion of the Events and "Paradoxes" of the Messinian Salt
Accumulation from the Perspective of the Regeneration and Evaporite Models
(A Comparative Analysis) 481
8.7.1 The Messinian Time Events 482
8.7.2 "Paradoxes" and Contradictions of the Messinian Salt Accumulation 483
8.7.3 Results of the Comparative Analysis 488
8.7.4 About the Indications of the Regeneration Processes' Participation in
the Messinian Salt Bodies 489
8.7.5 About the Causes of Disregard of the Injection Processes' Possible
Role in the Messinian Salt Accumulation 490
8.8 Conclusions 490
9 The Dead Sea: A Small Naphtho-Salt Node and Discharge Focus 493
9.1 Introduction 493
9.2 Key Features of Geology and Fluid-Dynamics of the Dead Sea Graben 495
9.2.1 Structural-Tectonic Situation 495
9.2.2 The Dead Sea Graben Salt Subsurface 499
9.2.3 Fluid-Dynamic Tensions in the Dead Sea Subsurface and the Ways of its
Discharge 502
9.3 The "Salt-Bearing Miracle" of the Globe 503
9.3.1 The Dead Sea and its "Unusual" Features 503
9.3.2 The Dead Sea Features as Reflected in its Names 511
9.4 Origin and History of the Dead Sea Salts, Diapirs and Brines 515
9.4.1 Existing Concepts of the Origin of the Dead Sea Salt Graben 515
9.4.2 An Allochthonous Model of Formation of Salts Filling-Up the Dead Sea
Graben 520
9.4.3 The Origin of the Dead Sea Brines: Why is the Sea Salty? 528
9.4.4 The Dead Sea Salts, Diapirs and Brines Formation History 534
9.5 ¿n the Natural Analogues of the Dead Sea 538
9.6 Fluctuation in the Dead Sea Brine Level as a Reflection of "Life" in
the Salt-Bearing Subsurface 548
9.6.1 On the Fluctuations of the Dead Sea Brine Level 548
9.6.2 Factors Affecting the Fluctuations of Brine Lakes Levels 553
9.6.3 Pulsation of the Dead Sea Brine Level as a Natural Manifestation of
the "Life" of Hydrocarbon-Brine-Salt Subsurface Systems 557
9.7 Myths as Reflections of Natural Events in the Dead Sea "Life" 559
9.7.1 Sodom Events: Testimonies by the Bible, Historians, Geographers,
Archeologists 560
9.7.2 Sodom Events: Geologic Interpretation 563
9.7.3 Salt or Halo-Volcanism: Geologic Script of the "Sodom Events" 565
9.7.4 Natural and Geotechnogenic Analogues of the "Sodom Events" 571
9.8 Conclusions 577
PART 4 Oil and Gas Occurrence Issues in the Salts-Bearing Basins 583
Introduction 583
10 Salts and Naphthids: Spatial, Kinetic, Geochemical Interrelations as
Forecast Factors 587
10.1 On the Role of Salts in Placement of Hydrocarbon Accumulations 587
10.1.1 General Nature of Spatial Interrelation between Salts and
Hydrocarbons 587
10.1.2 The Association with Various Geodynamic Types of Salt-Bearing Basins
591
10.1.3 The Role of Salts Various Morpho-Kinetic Types 596
10.2 Salt-Naphthide Nodes 598
10.3 Geological Features of Salt-Naphthide Nodes as the Factors of
Petroleum Occurrence Forecast (Salt-Naphthide Nodes as Geological Models)
603
10.4 Salt-Naphthide Nodes as Centers of Salt, Brines and Hydrocarbons
Ascending Migration and Discharge 606
10.5 On the Salt and Naphthide Crust Recycling 610
10.6 Conclusion. The Utilization of the Salt-Naphthide Interconnections in
the Forecast Evaluation of Petroleum Occurrences in Salt-Bearing Basins 611
11 Placement Patterns and Criteria of the Hydrogen Sulfide-Containing
Natural Gas Field Forecast Evaluation 615
11.1 Introduction 615
11.2 Distribution 616
11.3 The Origin 620
11.4 Factors Controlling the Placement Hydrogen Sulfide Containing Gas
Accumulations 622
11.4.1 Formation-Lithological Features 622
11.4.2 Stratigraphic Position 625
11.4.3 Structural-Tectonic Conditions 626
11.4.4 Conditions of Petroleum Occurrence and Gas Reserves 627
11.4.5 Trap Types 628
11.4.6 Thermobaric Conditions 628
11.4.7 Hydrogeological Conditions 629
11.4.8 Microbiological Parameters 629
11.4.9 Phase-Type of Accumulations 629
11.4.10 Properties of Accumulations' Chemical Composition 630
11.4.11 Sulfur Isotope Composition 631
11.4.12 Complexity and Zoning of the Mineral-Geochemical Sulfur Shows 632
11.4.13 The Destruction, Migration and Discharge Parameters 635
11.5 Conclusions. Criteria of the Petroleum Territories Forecast Evaluation
for Hydrogen Sulfide Containing Raw Materials 636
11.6 Conclusions 638
References 647
Index 673
About the Author 693
Introduction 1
PART 1 Salts in Earth's Crust: Composition, Tectonic and Kinematic History,
Salt-Naphthide Parakinesis 11
1 Geological-Tectonic Review of World Salt-Bearing Basins 13
1.1 Introduction 13
1.2 Salt-Bearing Basins of Eurasia 25
1.2.1 Geotectonic and Mineragenic Review 25
1.2.2 Brief Geological-Mineragenic Description of the Largest Salt-Bearing
Basins 31
1.2.2.1 Salt-Bearing Basins of Europe 31
1.2.2.2 Asian Salt-Bearing Basins 72
1.3 Salt-Bearing Basin of North America 105
1.3.1 Geotectonic and Mineragenic Review 105
1.3.2 Brief Geological-Mineragenic Description of the Largest Salt-Bearing
Basins 107
1.4 Salt-Bearing Basins of South America 128
1.4.1 Geotectonic and Mineragenic Review 128
1.4.2 Brief Geological-Mineragenic Description of the Largest Salt-Bearing
Basins 129
1.5 Salt-Bearing Basins of Africa and Arabia 136
1.5.1 Geotectonic and Mineragenic Review 136
1.5.2 Brief Geological-Mineragenic Description of the Largest Salt-Bearing
Basins 138
1.6 Salt-Bearing Basins of Australia 154
1.6.1 Geotectonic and Mineragenic Review 154
1.6.2 Brief Geological-Mineragenic Description of the Largest Salt-Bearing
Basins 156
1.7 Conclusion 162
2 Historical-Geodynamic Analysis of the Spatial and Temporal Distribution
of the World's Salt-Bearing Basins 163
2.1 Introduction 163
2.2 Fundamentals of the Geodynamic Analysis 164
2.2.1 Terminology 165
2.2.2 Geodynamic Classification 166
2.2.3 Geodynamic Types of Salt-Bearing Basins, their Diagnostic Indications
and Lithogeodynamic Models 171
2.3 On the Preservation of Salt Bodies and Information Value of the
Geologic Record 175
2.4 Neo-Geodynamic Salt-Bearing Basins of the World 177
2.4.1 Overview and Analysis 177
2.4.2 The General Picture of Placing Neo-Geodynamic Salt-Bearing Basins in
the Recent Kinematic Structure of Earth (Analysis Results) 198
2.5 Geodynamic History of the Salt Accumulation 201
2.6 Patterns in the Geodynamic Placement of Salt-Bearing Basins 213
2.6.1 Salt Accumulation Periodicity 213
2.6.2 Orderliness in the Spatial Placement of Salt-Bearing Objects 214
2.6.3 Regional Features of the Salt-Bearing Objects' Age Distribution 215
2.6.4 Geodynamic "Specialization" of Salt Accumulation Epochs 218
2.6.5 Geochemical "Specialization" of Salt Accumulation Epochs 219
2.6.6 Inheritance in the Placement of Salt-Bearing Objects 220
2.7 Conclusions 222
3 Kinematic History of the Salts in Earth's Crust 227
3.1 Morpho-Kinematic Groups of Salt Bodies 227
3.2 Salt Bodies of the Salt-Tectonic Group 229
3.3 Salt Bodies of the Orthotectonic Group 236
3.3.1 Salt Behavior Under Conditions of Active Tectonics 236
3.3.2 Morphotectonic Features of Salt Bodies in the Nappe-Folded Areas 239
3.3.3 The Salt Prevalence in Folded Areas of Various Ages 242
3.4 Kinematic Evolution of Salt Bodies in the Processes of Tectonic
Development 247
3.5 Problems Associated with the Formation of Nappe-Like Salt Bodies 249
3.6 Conclusions 253
PART 2 Salt in the System of Injection Formations. A Recycling Model of the
Salt- and Naphthide-Accumulation 257
4 Earth's Ascending Injection Systems and Injection Sedimentary Formations
259
4.1 Participation Problem of the Ascending Discharges in the Sedimentation
259
4.2 Ascending Discharges in Sedimentation Areas: Objects, Typification 265
4.2.1 System of Injection Discharges 265
4.2.2 Fluids, their Discharge Foci, Influence Aureoles (The Fluid Group
Proper) 267
4.2.3 Flowing Rock Masses and their Discharge Foci (Lithokinetic Group) 275
4.2.4 Parakineses of the Injection Discharges 278
4.3 The Recent Picture of Ascending Discharge Distribution 282
4.3.1 Occurrence of Recent Discharges 282
4.3.2 The Scale of a Recent Input of Injection Material in the Depositional
Environments 284
4.3.3 Geodynamic Environments of Recent Discharge Foci Placement and their
Endogenous Parameters 291
4.3.4 The Environment-Forming Role of Ascending Discharges 295
4.4 Ecological and Sedimentary Consequences of the Recent Ascending
Discharges 304
4.4.1 The Consequences of Fluid Discharges 305
4.4.2 The Consequences of Lithokinetic Discharges 311
4.4.3 General Model of the Injection-Depositional Processes 313
4.4.4 A Coordinated Typification of Injection Discharges and of their
Injection-Depositional Derivatives 318
4.5 Sedimentary Consequences of Past Ascending Discharges 319
4.5.1 Sedimentary Derivatives and Indications of the Fluid Paleo-Discharges
320
4.5.2 Sedimentary Derivatives and Features of Lithokinetic Paleo-Discharges
326
4.5.3 Injection-Depositional Parageneses 327
4.5.4 Regional Examples of the Injection-Depositional Formations 328
4.6 Combination of the Injection-Depositional Sediment Types with
Background Ones 335
4.7 Conclusions. Expanded Option of a Classification of Sedimentogenesis
Types 335
5 Regeneration (Recycling) Salt Accumulation Model 341
5.1 Status of the Salt Origin Problem 341
5.2 The Substance of the Regeneration Model and Examples of its
Implementation 346
5.3 Geological Prerequisites of the Model Implementation 348
5.3.1 The Material Prerequisites 349
5.3.2 The Geodynamic and Landscape Prerequisites 351
5.4 The Tectono-Kinematic Succession and the Brine-Salt Discharge Types 353
5.5 Sedimentation-Accumulation Consequences of Brine-Salt Discharges 356
5.5.1 General Succession of Processes in Sedimentation Basins 356
5.5.2 Chemogenic-Accumulative Processes (Interaction between Brines and the
Basin Water) 360
5.5.3 Extrusive-Accumulative Processes (Consequences of the Salt Mass
Discharge) 364
5.5.4 Discharge Consequences in Continental Environments 367
5.6 Discussion of the Regeneration Model 369
5.6.1 Evaluation of the Model's Genetic Positions and the Correspondence of
the Real Salt-Bearing Bodies Features with the Sedimentation Consequences
of the Model 369
5.6.2 Mineragenic Aspects of the Model 373
5.6.3 Evidence of the Regeneration Processes' Participation in the
Formation of Salt Bodies 374
5.6.4 On the Causes of Underestimating the Role of Regeneration Processes
in the Salt Accumulation 376
5.6.5 The Salt Dating Problem 378
5.6.6 On Some Contradictions of the Evaporite Salt Accumulation Models 379
5.6.7 On the Role of Exhalation Processes in the Salt Accumulation 380
5.7 On the Evolution of the Salt Accumulation Scale and Mechanism in
Earth's Geologic History 381
5.7.1 The Stratigraphic Placement of Salt 381
5.7.2 On the Interrelations of Various Salt Accumulation Mechanisms and
Their Evolution in Earth's Geologic History 383
5.8 Conclusions 386
PART 3 Natural Salt Accumulation Belts and Nodes (Examples) 389
6 Belts of Salt-Dome Basins along the Margins of Young Oceans 391
6.1 Introduction 391
6.2 Arrangement of Salt-Dome Basins along the Margins of Young Oceans 392
6.3 Geological Features of Marginal Oceanic Salt-Dome Basins 397
6.4 Geodynamic Position and History of Marginal Oceanic Salt-Dome Basins
398
6.5 Morphokinematic Features of Salt Tectonics in Marginal Oceanic Basins
403
6.6 Specific Conditions and Mechanisms of Salt Tectonics in Marginal
Oceanic Basins 405
6.7 Geodynamic Settings of Salt Tectonics in Marginal Oceanic Basins 407
6.8 The Salt Tectonics Influence on the Structure of Sedimentary Sequences
of Marginal Oceanic Basins 409
6.9 Petroleum Resource Potential of Marginal Oceanic Salt-Dome Basins 410
6.10 Conclusions 411
7 The Mexican Salt-Oil Node and Center of Natural and Geo-Technogenic Oil
Catastrophes 413
7.1 Introduction 413
7.2 Geologic, Petroleum and Fluid-Dynamic Particulars of the Mexican Basin
414
7.3 Salt and Petroleum-Bearing Subsurface of the Mexican Basin 418
7.4 Live Floor of the Gulf of Mexico 422
7.5 Accidents on the Oil Wells as Geotechnogenic Phenomenon 428
7.6 Emergency Oil Spills and Naphtha Sedimentogenesis 432
7.7 Largest Salt-Petroleum Basins as Global Centers of Hope and Hazard 434
7.8 On the Elimination of Oil Spills' Ecologic Consequences 436
7.9 Conclusions 439
8 Mediterranean Salt-Bearing Super-Giant.The Messinian Salinity Crisis
Enigma 441
8.1 Introduction 441
8.2 Key Features of the Geology and Paleogeodynamic History 443
8.2.1 Major Geology Features 443
8.2.2 Paleogeodynamic History 447
8.3 Salt Bearing of the Subsurface. Current Distribution of the Messinian
and Triassic Salts 449
8.3.1 The Messinian Salt Sequences 450
8.3.2 The Triassic Salts (Modern Distribution) 455
8.3.3 The Current Spatial Interrelations between the Triassic and Miocene
Salts 461
8.4 The Kinematic History of the Triassic Salts an their Distribution in
the Pre-Messinian Time 465
8.5 The Messinian Crisis of Salinity. Existing Concepts of the Messinian
Salts Origin 469
8.6 The Messinian Events as a Realization of the Regeneration Model 473
8.6.1 The Geological Events of the Messinian Time 475
8.6.2 The Processes of the Brine-Salt Masses Discharge 479
8.6.3 The Processes of Salt Accumulation 479
8.6.4 Analysis of Prerequisites and Events that had Facilitated the
Realization of the Regeneration Model 480
8.7 A discussion of the Events and "Paradoxes" of the Messinian Salt
Accumulation from the Perspective of the Regeneration and Evaporite Models
(A Comparative Analysis) 481
8.7.1 The Messinian Time Events 482
8.7.2 "Paradoxes" and Contradictions of the Messinian Salt Accumulation 483
8.7.3 Results of the Comparative Analysis 488
8.7.4 About the Indications of the Regeneration Processes' Participation in
the Messinian Salt Bodies 489
8.7.5 About the Causes of Disregard of the Injection Processes' Possible
Role in the Messinian Salt Accumulation 490
8.8 Conclusions 490
9 The Dead Sea: A Small Naphtho-Salt Node and Discharge Focus 493
9.1 Introduction 493
9.2 Key Features of Geology and Fluid-Dynamics of the Dead Sea Graben 495
9.2.1 Structural-Tectonic Situation 495
9.2.2 The Dead Sea Graben Salt Subsurface 499
9.2.3 Fluid-Dynamic Tensions in the Dead Sea Subsurface and the Ways of its
Discharge 502
9.3 The "Salt-Bearing Miracle" of the Globe 503
9.3.1 The Dead Sea and its "Unusual" Features 503
9.3.2 The Dead Sea Features as Reflected in its Names 511
9.4 Origin and History of the Dead Sea Salts, Diapirs and Brines 515
9.4.1 Existing Concepts of the Origin of the Dead Sea Salt Graben 515
9.4.2 An Allochthonous Model of Formation of Salts Filling-Up the Dead Sea
Graben 520
9.4.3 The Origin of the Dead Sea Brines: Why is the Sea Salty? 528
9.4.4 The Dead Sea Salts, Diapirs and Brines Formation History 534
9.5 ¿n the Natural Analogues of the Dead Sea 538
9.6 Fluctuation in the Dead Sea Brine Level as a Reflection of "Life" in
the Salt-Bearing Subsurface 548
9.6.1 On the Fluctuations of the Dead Sea Brine Level 548
9.6.2 Factors Affecting the Fluctuations of Brine Lakes Levels 553
9.6.3 Pulsation of the Dead Sea Brine Level as a Natural Manifestation of
the "Life" of Hydrocarbon-Brine-Salt Subsurface Systems 557
9.7 Myths as Reflections of Natural Events in the Dead Sea "Life" 559
9.7.1 Sodom Events: Testimonies by the Bible, Historians, Geographers,
Archeologists 560
9.7.2 Sodom Events: Geologic Interpretation 563
9.7.3 Salt or Halo-Volcanism: Geologic Script of the "Sodom Events" 565
9.7.4 Natural and Geotechnogenic Analogues of the "Sodom Events" 571
9.8 Conclusions 577
PART 4 Oil and Gas Occurrence Issues in the Salts-Bearing Basins 583
Introduction 583
10 Salts and Naphthids: Spatial, Kinetic, Geochemical Interrelations as
Forecast Factors 587
10.1 On the Role of Salts in Placement of Hydrocarbon Accumulations 587
10.1.1 General Nature of Spatial Interrelation between Salts and
Hydrocarbons 587
10.1.2 The Association with Various Geodynamic Types of Salt-Bearing Basins
591
10.1.3 The Role of Salts Various Morpho-Kinetic Types 596
10.2 Salt-Naphthide Nodes 598
10.3 Geological Features of Salt-Naphthide Nodes as the Factors of
Petroleum Occurrence Forecast (Salt-Naphthide Nodes as Geological Models)
603
10.4 Salt-Naphthide Nodes as Centers of Salt, Brines and Hydrocarbons
Ascending Migration and Discharge 606
10.5 On the Salt and Naphthide Crust Recycling 610
10.6 Conclusion. The Utilization of the Salt-Naphthide Interconnections in
the Forecast Evaluation of Petroleum Occurrences in Salt-Bearing Basins 611
11 Placement Patterns and Criteria of the Hydrogen Sulfide-Containing
Natural Gas Field Forecast Evaluation 615
11.1 Introduction 615
11.2 Distribution 616
11.3 The Origin 620
11.4 Factors Controlling the Placement Hydrogen Sulfide Containing Gas
Accumulations 622
11.4.1 Formation-Lithological Features 622
11.4.2 Stratigraphic Position 625
11.4.3 Structural-Tectonic Conditions 626
11.4.4 Conditions of Petroleum Occurrence and Gas Reserves 627
11.4.5 Trap Types 628
11.4.6 Thermobaric Conditions 628
11.4.7 Hydrogeological Conditions 629
11.4.8 Microbiological Parameters 629
11.4.9 Phase-Type of Accumulations 629
11.4.10 Properties of Accumulations' Chemical Composition 630
11.4.11 Sulfur Isotope Composition 631
11.4.12 Complexity and Zoning of the Mineral-Geochemical Sulfur Shows 632
11.4.13 The Destruction, Migration and Discharge Parameters 635
11.5 Conclusions. Criteria of the Petroleum Territories Forecast Evaluation
for Hydrogen Sulfide Containing Raw Materials 636
11.6 Conclusions 638
References 647
Index 673
About the Author 693