scholarly journals Formation of Hydrocarbon Deposits in the Riphean-Lower- Paleozoic Sedimentary Basin in the Southern Siberian Platform

2021 ◽  
Vol 666 (3) ◽  
pp. 032066
Author(s):  
M R Marsanova ◽  
A G Berzin
1998 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 251-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernhardt Saini-Eidukat ◽  
Nikolai S. Rudashevsky ◽  
Alexander G. Polozov

AbstractNew occurrences of hibbingite, γ-Fe2(OH)3Cl, have been found associated with platinum-group minerals in the Noril'sk Complex, and with the Korshunovskoye iron ores of the southern Siberian platform. The Norils'k grains, which are up to 0. 6 mm in diameter, are associated with the platinumgroup minerals froodite, cabriite, urvantsevite and with native silver in massive pentlandite–cubanite– chalcopyrite ore. The Korshunovskoye iron ore sample in which hibbingite was found is composed of fine-grained magnetite ore associated with halite. Hibbingite, hematite and silver grains are found in cavities in halite; the reddish-brown hibbingite grains usually occur as encrustations in the cavities. The size of hibbingite and hematite grains is up to 100 µm.Hibbingite from the Noril'sk Complex contains a significant kempite (Mn2(OH)3Cl) component; in some cases it contains over 50 mol. % Mn. These data suggest that at least a partial solid solution series exists between hibbingite and kempite. All known occurrences of hibbingite represent paragenetically late mineral assemblages. In the case of the Korshunovskoye deposits, the occurrences are associated with highly concentrated hydrothermal brines derived from the Lower Paleozoic saline sediments of the Siberian Platform cover.


1968 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 523-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. O. van Everdingen

The existence of major flow systems in the Western Sedimentary Basin of Canada is reflected in the chemical composition and degree of concentration of the formation waters involved. Subsurface salt solution and collapse, and accumulation and destruction of hydrocarbon 'deposits' are directly related to such flow systems. Many occurrences of 'anomalies' in pressure, chemical composition, and concentration may be explained on the basis of membrane behavior of shales. The presence of organic matter may have an important influence on the composition of the formation waters. More sophisticated sampling techniques combined with more detailed analysis of formation waters are needed to develop the full potential benefit of formation-water studies for the petroleum industry.


2005 ◽  
Vol 42 (11) ◽  
pp. 2059-2071 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dennis J Bottomley ◽  
Ian D Clark ◽  
Nicholas Battye ◽  
Tom Kotzer

Hypersaline brines of marine origin, deep within fractured crystalline rocks of the Canadian Shield, are characterized by calcium-chloride compositions with relatively low concentrations of magnesium and sulphate. Such chemistries among crustal fluids are very unusual, regardless of their origins, which makes it difficult to identify possible genetic associations between shield brines and other marine brines. Key conservative chemical and isotopic attributes of shield brines from the Yellowknife and Sudbury areas are similar, however, to those of fluid inclusions in sparry, late-stage hydrothermal dolomites in lower Paleozoic carbonates of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin, suggesting that both fluid types originated from a residual seawater brine of probable Devonian age. This interpretation is supported by determination of a helium-4 model age for the Yellowknife brine that is consistent with a Devonian origin. Therefore, dolomitization was likely both a major source of Ca and a sink for about half of the initial Mg in the brine prior to its infiltration into the underlying basement rocks. Mass-balance considerations indicate that albitization of plagioclase, predominantly in basinal clastic sediments, was an equally important mineral source of Ca to the infiltrating brine, but interactions with carbonate and silicate rocks cannot account for the entire Ca inventory in the brine. A major contribution to the Ca budget must also have been initially provided by the evaporative concentration of seawater, which is only possible if it were enriched in calcium and depleted in sulphate compared with modern seawater, as was probably the case during Devonian time.


2008 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 176-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
N.V. Mel’nikov ◽  
Yu.A. Filiptsov ◽  
V.I. Valchak ◽  
E.V. Smirnov ◽  
L.V. Borovikova

2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 25-47
Author(s):  
E.P. Razvozzhaeva ◽  

Generations of the materials of the seismic exploratory works conducted in the Aldan-Maya sedimentary basin substantiated the seismostratigraphic model and construction of the lateral and longitudinal sections allowed an understanding of the specific features of the sedimentary cover structure and specifying the basin boundaries. Based on the seismic sections and geologic map at a scale of 1: 2 500 000 a scheme of structures formed in the Riphean was developed. These constructions made it possible the purposeful plan of the oil-and-gas searching and exploratory works, estimation of thickness and area of the parent material. The investigations made can be applied for clarification of the structure of the eastern Siberian Platform.


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