scholarly journals THE ROLE OF HYDROGEOCHEMISTRY IN THE IDENTIFICATION OF «MISSED» OIL AND GAS DEPOSITS AS ONE OF THE SOURCES OF REPLACINGTHE RESOURCE BASE OF THE WEST SIBERIAN MEGABASIN

2018 ◽  
pp. 16-22
Author(s):  
V. A. Beshentsev ◽  
T. V. Semenova

The article is dedicated to the memory of the scientist Vladimir Mikhailovich Matusevich. It considers his unpublished ideas and thoughts, with some additions by the authors of the article, about the close connection between hydrogeochemistry and hydrocarbon accumulations and about its role in the search for «missed» oil and gas deposits.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael King ◽  
Kim Welford ◽  
Alexander Peace

<p>The tectonic evolution of the southern North Atlantic is a subject of increasing interest due to its continental margins playing host to several world-class frontier regions for oil and gas exploration. The Newfoundland-Iberia conjugate margin pair serves as one of the best studied non-volcanic rifted conjugate margin pairs in the world, and is a topic of constant scientific debate due to its complex plate kinematic history and geological evolution.  Recent adaptability of the GPlates freely available plate tectonic reconstruction software provides an excellent tool for gaining insight into complex plate kinematic problems. The ability to account for regions of deformation, integration of various geological and geophysical datasets, and the ability to calculate temporal variations in crustal thickness, strain rates, and velocity vectors provide an optimal environment for solving crustal-scale geological and geophysical problems. Building upon previous rigid and deformable plate tectonic modelling studies, the aim of this work is to create deformable plate tectonic models of Iberia with emphasis on the West Iberian margin and the Pyrenees to assess Iberia’s evolution during the formation of the southern North Atlantic from 200 Ma to present day. A comparison of crustal thickness results calculated from GPlates models with those obtained from gravity inversion, passive and controlled source seismology, and geological field mapping, provided a good metric for investigating the plate kinematics of Iberia and assessing previous discrepancies when considering the crustal evolution of the West Iberian margin and the Pyrenees as an integrated plate kinematic system. Results from the GPlates models produced in this study also demonstrate the significance of continental fragments and their independent motion during rifting. In particular, we investigate the independent motion of the Galicia Bank and its role with respect to the deformation experienced within the Galicia Interior Basin and the role of the Ebro Block and Landes High during deformation prior to the Pyrenean Orogeny. In addition, this study highlights the importance of inherited structures with respect to the styles of deformation experienced during rifting of continental crust. Preliminary deformable plate modeling results of the West Iberian margin indicate that the independent motion of the Galicia Bank and its interplay with inherited structures is crucial for deriving the amount of deformation inferred by gravity inversion and regional seismic studies within the Galicia Interior Basin.</p>


Author(s):  
Myroslav Syvyi

During the Polish occupation between the First and Second World Wars, scientific and exploration work in Western Ukraine was carried out by Polish, Ukrainian, Czech and Hungarian researchers. The Carpathian folded region, the Precarpathian boundary deflection, the Transcarpathian inner deflection and the Volyn-Podillia outskirts of the East European platform were studied. The main areas of research were the Carpathians and Precarpathians in connection with the discovery and development of deposits of liquid and gaseous hydrocarbons discovered here, which attracted the attention of researchers for obvious reasons. The main research conducted during this period was organized by the Geological Institute (Warsaw) and the Carpathian Geological Institute (Boryslav). No special studies have been conducted to study the structure of the Volyn-Podillia part of the East European platform at that time. After thorough work of Laskarev V.D. in 1904-1914, works which dealt mainly with local issues of tectonics appeared. This, however, significantly supplemented the existing ideas about the structural features of the region. A brief overview of studies of the structural features of the East European platform southwestern margin allows us to state the following. The most significant achievements in studying the structure of the described region were noted by such researchers as W. Teisseyre, V. Zykh, G. Teisseyre, Z. Pazdro, S. Nazarevych and others. Thus, as early as 1922 famous Polish tectonist Wawrzyniec Teisseyre proposed to consider the Holohory-Kremenets anticlinal and the Holohory flexure as independent units. They are associated with the migration of the geosynclinal axis of the Carpathians, ie with the division of the Carpathian chain into three rings (meso-, eo- and neo-Carpathians). By studying the tectonics of the foothills, he also singled out the chronological phases of migration. Comparative studies have revealed cycles of development of Precarpathian dislocations in the foothills. The initial stage of flexure development is a flat roof-like elevation preserved on the Podillia plate, with the Holohory-Kremenets anticlinal on the edge. The processes of change and disintegration of such anticlinales cause the formation of later Holohory flexures and extensive deflections. Developing his views on the decisive role of the foundation in the structure of mountain ranges and the important role of tectonic dislocations (flexures, discharges) in the nature of platform tectonics, he emphasized that transverse dislocations are the manifestation of displacements in the deep base. Russian tectonist M. Tetyaev suggested that the structure of the Transcarpathian territory is determined primarily by the folded zone of hercinide, which limits it from the west. According to him, the East European platform near the Carpathians is broken by discharges and partially hidden under the structures of the alpine fold. Ye. Oppokov, who studied the geological structure of the Devonian Podillia (Polissia) shaft, comes to the conclusion about its tectonic nature (anticlinal fold). A. Zirgoffer had a different opinion. According to the study of the relief, he believed that the Podillia shaft is a kind of barrier between the Volyn Plain and the Podillia Upland and was formed due to erosion processes. In 1928, S. Nazarevych suggested the influence of folding on the occurrence of rupture in Transnistria. According to the author the folding of gypsum, fracture of rocks of different ages (from Silurian to Neogene inclusive), the direction of the Dniester, coinciding with the main cracks, the shape of cracks may be the evidence of vigorous movements of the earth's crust, which may be the result of those mountain-building processes, which reached the maximum stress in the third age and formed Carpathians in the West. W.Teisseyre considers the fundamental issues of epeirotectonics. Based on the study of extensive Polish and foreign literature, he concludes that the network of epeirogenic lines does not correspond to the arcs of mountain ranges, and vice versa - the arcs enter at the intersection of different ages. The author opposes the understanding of epeirogenesis in the form of giant sea waves. W.Teisseyre believed that Podillia is one of the main nodes of the mountain movements of Eastern Europe. Within the Precarpathians, deep ridges and depressions are considered, established mainly according to geophysical data (Bibrka - Mykolayiv, Rozdil - Demnia, Kavske - Opary, Stara Sil - Zhuravno, etc.). From the point of view of oil and gas exploration, preference is given to the Precarpathian part of the Holohory-Kremenets-Boryslav line, then to the Dniester-Stryi basin and to the more ancient epeiroanticlinal line Smykivtsi-Kovalivka-Hrabivka-Maidan (“Stanislaviv Horst”). The importance of Transcarpathian anticlines in the search for oil and gas fields is emphasized. It is noted, in particular, that the uplift of Boryslav and Maidan - the main productive areas of the Carpathian oil and gas zone - coincides with the axes of the Podillia-Transcarpathian anticlines Holohory - Kremenets and Smykivtsi - Kovalivka. Some conclusions and generalizations were made by researchers in the interwar period (on the decisive role of the crystalline basement in the structure of mountain ranges, on the inheritance of ancient forms of the foundation surface and the chalk surface with modern relief, identified anticline uplifts in Paleozoic sediments and their oil and gas potential, on the coincidence of the axes of the Transcarpathian anticline uplifts and the main productive areas of the Carpathian oil and gas zone, etc.) have not lost their scientific value in our time and are confirmed by modern research. Studies in the 1920s and 1930s of the tectonic structure of the southwestern outskirts of the ancient East- European platform contributed to the formation of a reliable basis for the establishment and conduction of extensive exploration (oil and gas, coal, sulfur, salts, phosphorites, building materials, etc.) and systematic research in the postwar years. Key words: East European platform, tectonic structure, anticlinal uplifts, crystalline basement.


2003 ◽  
pp. 66-76
Author(s):  
I. Dezhina ◽  
I. Leonov

The article is devoted to the analysis of the changes in economic and legal context for commercial application of intellectual property created under federal budgetary financing. Special attention is given to the role of the state and to comparison of key elements of mechanisms for commercial application of intellectual property that are currently under implementation in Russia and in the West. A number of practical suggestions are presented aimed at improving government stimuli to commercialization of intellectual property created at budgetary expense.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 69-112
Author(s):  
Pierre Legendre

"Der Beitrag reevaluiert die «dogmatische Funktion», eine soziale Funktion, die mit biologischer und kultureller Reproduktion und folglich der Reproduktion des industriellen Systems zusammenhängt. Indem sie sich auf der Grenze zwischen Anthropologie und Rechtsgeschichte des Westens situiert, nimmt die Studie die psychoanalytische Frage nach der Rolle des Rechts im Verhalten des modernen Menschen erneut in den Blick. </br></br>This article reappraises the dogmatic function, a social function related to biological and cultural reproduction and consequently to the reproduction of the industrial system itself. On the borderline of anthropology and of the history of law – applied to the West – this study takes a new look at the question raised by psychoanalysis concerning the role of law in modern human behaviour. "


2016 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
pp. 283-329
Author(s):  
Marieke Dechesne ◽  
Jim Cole ◽  
Christopher Martin

This two-day field trip provides an overview of the geologic history of the North Park–Middle Park area and its past and recent drilling activity. Stops highlight basin formation and the consequences of geologic configuration on oil and gas plays and development. The trip focuses on work from ongoing U.S. Geological Survey research in this area (currently part of the Cenozoic Landscape Evolution of the Southern Rocky Mountains Project funded by the National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program). Surface mapping is integrated with perspective from petroleum exploration within the basin. The starting point is the west flank of the Denver Basin to compare and contrast the latest Cretaceous through Eocene basin fill on both flanks of the Front Range. The next stop continues on the south end of the North Park–Middle Park area, about 60 miles [95km] west from the first stop. A general clockwise loop is described by following U.S. Highway 40 from Frasier via Granby and Kremmling to Muddy Pass after which CO Highway 14 is followed to Walden for an overnight stay. On the second day after a loop north of Walden, the Continental Divide is crossed at Willow Creek Pass for a return to Granby via Highway 125. The single structural basin that underlies both physiographic depressions of North Park and Middle Park originated during the latest Cretaceous to Eocene Laramide orogeny (Tweto, 1957, 1975; Dickinson et al., 1988). It largely filled with Paleocene to Eocene sediments and is bordered on the east by the Front Range, on the west by the Park Range and Gore Range, on the north by Independence Mountain and to the south by the Williams Fork and Vasquez Mountains (Figure 1). This larger Paleocene-Eocene structural basin is continuous underneath the Continental Divide, which dissects the basin in two approximately equal physiographic depressions, the ‘Parks.’ Therefore Cole et al. (2010) proposed the name ‘Colorado Headwaters Basin’ or ‘CHB,’ rather than North Park–Middle Park basin (Tweto 1957), to eliminate any confusion between the underlying larger Paleocene-Eocene basin and the two younger depressions that developed after the middle Oligocene. The name was derived from the headwaters of the Colorado, North Platte, Laramie, Cache La Poudre, and Big Thompson Rivers which are all within or near the study area. In this field guide, we will use the name Colorado Headwaters Basin (CHB) over North Park–Middle Park basin. Several workers have described the geology in the basin starting with reports from Marvine who was part of the Hayden Survey and wrote about Middle Park in 1874, Hague and Emmons reported on North Park as part of the King Survey in 1877, Cross on Middle Park (1892), and Beekly surveyed the coal resources of North Park in 1915. Further reconnaissance geologic mapping was performed by Hail (1965 and 1968) and Kinney (1970) in the North Park area and by Izett (1968, 1975), and Izett and Barclay (1973) in Middle Park. Most research has focused on coal resources (Madden, 1977; Stands, 1992; Roberts and Rossi, 1999), and oil and gas potential (1957, all papers in the RMAG guidebook to North Park; subsurface structural geologic analysis of both Middle Park and North Park (the CHB) by oil and gas geologist Wellborn (1977a)). A more comprehensive overview of all previous geologic research in the basin can be found in Cole et al. (2010). Oil and gas exploration started in 1925 when Continental Oil's Sherman A-1 was drilled in the McCallum field in the northeast part of the CHB. It produced mostly CO2 from the Dakota Sandstone and was dubbed the ‘Snow cone’ well. Later wells were more successful finding oil and/or gas, and exploration and production in the area is ongoing, most notably in the unconventional Niobrara play in the Coalmont-Hebron area.


2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (6) ◽  
pp. 26-36
Author(s):  
A. V. Topilin ◽  
A. S. Maksimova

The article reflects the results of a study of the impact of migration on regional labour markets amidst a decline in the working-age population in Russia. After substantiating the relevance of the issues under consideration, the authors propose a methodological analysis toolkit, the author’s own methodology for calculating the coefficients of permanent long-term external and internal labour migration in regional labour markets, and the coefficient of total migration burden. In addition, the authors provide an overview of the information and statistical base of the study. According to current migration records, data of Rosstat sample surveys on Russian labour migrants leaving for employment in other regions, regional labour resources balance sheets based on the calculated coefficients of labour market pressures, the authors analyzed the impact of migration on the Russian regional labour markets over the past decade. It revealed an increasing role of internal labour migration in many regions, primarily in the largest economic agglomerations and oil and gas territories. At the same time, the role of external labour migration remains stable and minimum indicators of the contribution of permanent migration to the formation of regional labour markets continue to decrease. It has been established that irrational counter flows of external and internal labour migration have developed, which indicates not only an imbalance in labour demand and supply but also a discrepancy between the qualitative composition of migrants and the needs of the economy. It is concluded that the state does not effectively regulate certain types of migration, considering its impact on the labour market. The authors justified the need for conducting regular household sample surveys according to specific programs to collect information about labour migrants and the conditions for using their labour. In addition to the current migration records, using interregional analysis, this information allows making more informed decisions at the federal and regional levels to correct the negative situation that has developed in the regional labour markets even before the coronavirus pandemic had struck.


Author(s):  
George Hoffmann

On a warm summer afternoon in 1561, Calvin’s chief editor donned a heavy stole, thick robes, and a gleaming tiara and proceeded to strut and fret his hour upon the stage in a comedy of his own devising. For little more than a century, Christians in the West had celebrated on August 6th Christ’s Transfiguration as the son of God in shining robes. But on this Sunday in Geneva, the city council, consistory, and an audience fresh from having attended edifying sermons at morning service gathered to applaud the transfiguration of the learned Conrad Badius into the title role of ...


Author(s):  
Paul Stevens

This chapter is concerned with the role of oil and gas in the economic development of the global economy. It focuses on the context in which established and newer oil and gas producers in developing countries must frame their policies to optimize the benefits of such resources. It outlines a history of the issue over the last twenty-five years. It considers oil and gas as factor inputs, their role in global trade, the role of oil prices in the macroeconomy and the impact of the geopolitics of oil and gas. It then considers various conventional views of the future of oil and gas in the primary energy mix. Finally, it challenges the drivers behind these conventional views of the future with an emphasis on why they may prove to be different from what is expected and how this may change the context in which producers must frame their policy responses.


Author(s):  
Peter Kayode Oniemola ◽  
Jane Ezirigwe

To achieve universal energy access will attract huge capital investments. If sub-Saharan Africa is to realize anything close to the ambitious goals set for its energy access, then new actors, innovative funding mechanisms and sustainable technologies will have to be attracted. Finance is needed for activities such as rural electrification, clean cooking facilities, diesel motors and generators, other renewable energy technologies, oil and gas infrastructures, etc. Finance is also needed in research and development of suitable technologies and funding options as well as investment in the capacity to formulate and implement sound energy policies. This chapter examines the varied financing options for energy access in sub-Saharan Africa. It argues that with appropriate laws in place and effective mechanism for implementation, African countries can significantly engage private sector financing, international financial institutions and foreign donors. The role of the law here will be in creating an enabling environment for financing.


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