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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
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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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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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| 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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