Substantiation of tectonic nature and formation time of terrigenous strata of the lower carboniferous deposits and its enclosing carbonate rocks of the Kama-Kinel system of downfolds

Author(s):  
I.S. Gutman ◽  
◽  
G.N. Potemkin ◽  
I.A. Ageeva ◽  
A.I. Mitina ◽  
...  
2022 ◽  
pp. 60-74
Author(s):  
Yuri Ezhkov ◽  
Rahmon Rahimov ◽  
Anvar Holiyorov ◽  
Ubaydullo Toshmetov

The Koshmansai ore field is located in the southern part of the granitoid Chatkal batholith, in its apical ledge and exocontact zones, in the Koshmansai river basin. The host environment of the granitoids is Lower Carboniferous carbonate rocks, which were primarily affected by intensive skarnification. Sedimentary-metamorphic and volcanics rocks and granitoids constitute the geological structure of the skarn rare-metal-polymetallic Koshmansai deposit. In the distribution of ore-forming and associated elе- ments in the mineral phases of skarn orebodies, their morphogenetic type plays a certain role. Thus, in bimetasomatic skarns, minerals accumulate more Cu, Zn, Ni, Te, Tl, Ge. In infiltration skarns, these are Ag, Pb, Bi, Cd, Sb, Co. Sulfide polymetallic mineralization in skarns is associated with quartz and calcite. The Koshmansai ore field has a distinct geochemical zoning, which can be subdivided into the Koshmansai rare- metal-polymetallic deposit at the upper levels of the ore field and the Nizhnekoshmansai rare-metal-copper ore occurrence at its lower levels. Nevertheless, orebodies formation proceeded in a similar thermodynamic environment, in the conditions of upper shielding at low temperature gradients, which makes it possible to consider the ore field as a single geochemical anomaly. The vertical geochemical zoning of ore-forming element halos determined by their concentration at the lower section levels of the Koshmansai deposit skarn orebodies suggests the expansion of its prospects in depth.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Regina Khanbikova ◽  
Venera Bazarevskaya ◽  
Oleg Sotnikov ◽  
Albert Bachkov

Abstract Hydrocarbon reserves in carbonate reservoirs account for 38% - 60% of total world reserves, according to different estimates. In Tatarstan, carbonate reservoirs are found, mostly, in the eastern slope of the Melekess Depression and the South-Tatarian Arch. The carbonate reservoirs are confined to the Middle and Lower Carboniferous sediments, the Upper Devonian (including the domanik sediments), and the Upper Permian (the Kazanian heavy oil accumulations). Considering an extensive geographic and stratigraphic range and differing tectonic and sedimentation environments, the carbonate rocks are characterized by a variety of reservoir properties. In contrast to terrigenous rocks, the carbonate void space is complicated by secondary processes that took place much later than the sedimentogenesis-lithogenesis stage. Numerous fissures, caves, sutures, and stylolites form the void space of the reservoir rock matrix containing commercial hydrocarbon reserves. In addition to fracturing and vugginess contributing to increase of void space of carbonate rocks, the secondary processes include sulphatisation and secondary dolomitization (in limestones), adding to deterioration of reservoir properties. The secondary processes impede understanding and evaluation of reservoir properties and saturation potential, in particular, determination of the oil and gas saturation factors (Dyakonova T.F. et al, 2019, Akhmetov R.T. et al, 2017)/ In the western slope of the South-Tatarian Arch, carbonate reservoirs are confined to the Middle and Lower Carboniferous sediments. Numerous RCAL and SCAL investigations provided valuable insight into these targets. In this paper, we used data from the laboratory experiments and studies of core and oil samples from the six neighbor fields on the western slope of the South-Tatarian Arch. Because of common sedimentological and tectonic sedimentation environments and lithological similarity of rocks within the stratigraphic referencing, the six fields under analysis were considered as analogous, and the results of the laboratory studies of the samples were reviewed collectively.


Sedimentology ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 489-512 ◽  
Author(s):  
ZSOLT R. NAGY ◽  
IAN D. SOMERVILLE ◽  
JAY M. GREGG ◽  
STEPHEN P. BECKER ◽  
KEVIN L. SHELTON ◽  
...  

Minerals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 560
Author(s):  
Andressa A. Silva ◽  
Pedro Cordeiro ◽  
Sean C. Johnson ◽  
Leonardo E. Lagoeiro ◽  
Loretta Corcoran ◽  
...  

The Tullacondra Cu-Ag deposit is located on the southern margin of the Lower Carboniferous Irish Midlands orefield and contains historical reserves of approximately 4.2 Mt at 0.7% Cu and 27.5 ppm Ag. The deposit is hosted within the hanging wall of a feeder fault, the EW-trending Tullacondra Fault, where sulfides and sulfosalts containing elevated Cu, Ag, As, and Sb deposited, whereas Zn and Pb are nearly absent. The deposition of Cu sulfides in Tullacondra took place along bedding and bedding-parallel dissolution seams, suggesting an epigenetic mineralization that formed: (a) the Transition Series-hosted mineralized zone containing elevated Cu associated with Ag, As, and Sb; (b) the Lower Limestone Shale-hosted mineralized zone, Cu-dominated and depleted in other metals, and (c) a near-vertical mineralized zone associated with fractures related to the Tullacondra Fault. Some similarities are shared with Irish-type Zn-Pb deposits, such as structural and stratigraphic controls, and elevated Cu, Ag, As, and Sb within feeder-fault proximal zones (such as in Lisheen and Silvermines). Whether Tullacondra mineralization was part of the Irish-type system or not, our deposit geometry evaluation, whole-rock geochemistry, paragenetic sequence, and texture relationships indicate that Cu-Ag deposition involved the reaction of metal-bearing fluids with carbonate rocks.


1969 ◽  
Vol 21 (03) ◽  
pp. 516-523
Author(s):  
H Engelberg ◽  
L. P Engelberg

SummaryThe addition of small amounts of extrinsic thromboplastin or of thrombin to blood in vitro accelerated coagulation more frequently and to a greater extent when determined by the flowing time test than when measured by the silicone clotting time, or by the blood or plasma heparin tolerance tests. Similar results were obtained when intrinsic thromboplastin formation was stimulated by contact with glass. However there was little or no acceleration of the flowing clotting time of plasma obtained from aliquots of the thromboplastin-containing blood. These results indicate that the flowing clotting time (thrombus formation time) of whole blcod is a more reliable test of hypercoagulability than previously described blood or plasma clotting time tests.


2015 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 106-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Bondarenko ◽  
L. Stepanyuk ◽  
Z. Karly ◽  
V. Syomka ◽  
N. Donskoy ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 120 (3) ◽  
pp. 421-432 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Browning ◽  
M. Reid

AbstractThe Lower Carboniferous, probably Tournaisian, Kweekvlei Formation is part of the Witteberg Group (Cape Supergroup) of South Africa. Together with the overlying Floriskraal Formation, it forms an upward-coarsening succession within the Lake Mentz Subgroup. Sedimentary features of the Kweekvlei Formation suggest deposition in a storm-wave dominated marine setting, within the storm-influenced, distal part of an offshore transition zone environment. This predominantly argillaceous formation preserves a low diversity trace fossil assemblage. Reworked vascular plant debris (including the problematic genus Praeramunculus sp.) and a shark spine have been reported for the Kweekvlei Formation. There are no known stratigraphic equivalents in South Africa.


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