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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
Edited By Published |
Acknowledgments
To all the authors that contributed
to this book, thank you for the countless hours spent toiling on manuscripts
while stretched by other demands and for your efforts to comply with the
editing and reviewing schedule. Each chapter was reviewed by another author
and by "outside" experts in certain aspects of salt tectonics. Accordingly,
we would like to thank the following reviewers for invaluable assistance
in the onerous task of reviewing the manuscripts. |
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The
final compilation of this book was carried out with the invaluable help
of the following individuals at the Bureau of Economic Geology, The University
of Texas at Austin: Jeannette Miether for stylistic copyediting; Margaret
Evans and Joel Lardon for helping with computer graphics; and Hongxing
Ge for general assistance.
Finally, it has been a rewarding and pleasurable experience to collaborate with AAPG's highly professional production staff, especially Anne Thomas and Kathy Walker. Martin Jackson David Roberts Sig Snelson
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In August 1990, AAPG's Science
Director, Gary Howell, first suggested to one of us the idea of holding
a Hedberg International Research Conference on "Salt Tectonics" with worldwide
scope. After a formal meeting with him in May 1991, the three compiling
editors accepted the task of convening the symposium, which was held in
Bath, U.K., on September 13-17, 1993.
The timing of this conference
was propitious. The preceding four years had seen an explosive expansion
in papers dealing with salt tectonics. In particular, this field of study
had just passed through a major conceptual breakthrough based on three-dimensional
seismic data and innovative kinematic and dynamic modeling of salt tectonics.
The objective of the conference was to highlight and share these advances
in understanding the structural geology and tectonics of salt structures
at seismic scales in the context of hydrocarbon exploration and development,
including classic areas having abundant data as well as lesser known basins
characterized by newly discovered structural styles. Of special interest
were newer aspects of salt tectonics that were unknown at the symposium
30 years ago. These included controls on the shape and structural evolution
of salt structures, especially the style and rate of sedimentation; the
influence of faulting in extensional, contractional, transtensional, transpressional,
and inversion regimes; emplacement of allochthonous salt sheets and canopies
and their subsequent segmentation and redistribution; the creation of salt
welds and fault welds; and the vernerable but previously neglected field
of contractional salt tectonics.
The program of the Bath conference
was the largest and most comprehensive ever dealing with salt tectonics.
Some 46 papers were presented orally and another 34 displayed as posters
interspersed with discussion sessions that continued well beyond the day's
proceedings. Invitations to the 75 attendees were deliberately skewed to
attract a majority of contributions from industry to ensure release of
abundant new geological and geophysical data of high quality. As a result,
the papers spanned a broad range, covering state-of-the-art seismic imaging,
restoration techniques, and mechanical modeling followed by examination
of salt tectonics (and some shale tectonics) in the following regions:
Gulf of Mexico, Arctic Canada, Barents Sea, North Sea, Spain, Mediterranean
Sea, Algeria, Tunisia, Red Sea, Iran, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Caribbean,
Angola, Gabon, and Brazil. The conference was notable for the wealth of
new data and novel ideas offered through formal presentations and informal
discussions among attendees. During the conference, many attendees expressed
a wish to see a fuller collection of papers published rather than the volume
of extended abstracts available only to attendees. Accordingly, they were
asked to respond to a subsequent questionnaire in which they strongly reconfirmed
their earlier wish to see publication of a collection of full-length papers
as an AAPG Memoir.
This volume is the result.
To ensure prompt publication of an affordable book, the length was restricted
to 21 chapters (coincidentally the same number of papers as in Memoir 8)
out of the 80 papers presented at the conference. Not all the presenters
were able to contribute full-length papers, but nevertheless we were able
to be highly
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vi Foreword | |||
preserves
the wide geographic coverage of the conference and includes both detailed
regional syntheses of classic areas, such as the Gulf of Mexico and the
North Sea, as well as preliminary investigations of equally fascinating
but less-explored regions of salt tectonics, such as the deep-water Santos
Basin (Brazil), offshore Yemen (Red Sea), Parry Islands (Arctic Canada),
and the Nordkapp Basin (Barents Sea). We hope that the investigations of
salt tectonics presented in this volume will serve as classic examples
of a wide range of structural styles involving evaporites. We also offer
these examples as case studies that can be applied as guides to petroleum
and mineral exploration in other salt basins around the world. With this
broad scope, this book is entitled Salt Tectonics: A Global Perspective.
The organization of the book
has a structure similar to that of the Bath conference. A historical review
chapter is followed by four chapters on section balancing and modeling
(later chapters also incorporate modeling research, but their focus is
more geographic). The next 16 chapters are organized along geographic lines
in loose order of their current hydrocarbon production, from the Gulf of
Mexico, where mature exploration has been invigorated by the subsalt play,
to remote reaches of the Arctic Ocean, where exploration is in its infancy.
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