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  • 2010-2014  (3,084,818)
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  • 1
    Unknown
    New Brunswick (U.S.A.) and London (U.K.) :Transaction Publishers,
    Call number: IASS 16.89965
    Pages: xviii, 307 pages ; , 23 cm
    ISBN: 9781412847483
    Uniform Title: Art de la conjecture.
    Language: English
    Branch Library: RIFS Library
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  • 2
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    Unknown
    Delft ; 1.1969-76.2010
    Call number: S 90.0083
    ISSN: 0165-1706
    Language: English
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 3
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Princeton, NJ : Princeton Univ. Press
    Call number: PIK B 100-15-0144
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 179 S.
    Edition: 1. Princeton paperback print.
    ISBN: 0691059691 (pbk.) , 9780691164168
    Series Statement: A Henry Spearman mystery
    Language: English
    Location: A 18 - must be ordered
    Branch Library: PIK Library
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  • 4
    Call number: S 91.0379
    ISSN: 0138-3647 , 1432-3702
    Language: English
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 5
    Call number: S 12.0203
    Note: Inhaltl. ident. mit: Gutachten zu Forschung, Innovation und technologischer Leistungsfähigkeit Deutschlands und Stellungnahme der Bundesregierung , Online-Ausg.: Gutachten zu Forschung, Innovation und technologischer Leistungsfähigkeit Deutschlands , Engl. Ausg.: Research, innovation and technological performance in Germany
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2010-04-01
    Description: The contributions in this volume originally formed a set of presentations at a conference on the same theme held in Mallorca, Spain in 2006. The goal of this conference was to investigate the potential to develop age or architecture specific reference models for carbonate systems and reservoirs similar to those successfully developed for siliciclastic systems. The conference focused on the Mesozoic and Cenozoic carbonate sequences of the Mediterranean and Middle East. These sequences were chosen for a number of reasons. Firstly, they represent sequence development in a variety of basin settings within a contiguous geographical entity, the former NeoTethys Ocean (Fig. 1). The sequences were also formed predominantly within tropical or sub-tropical climatic zones (cf. Schlager 2003). Finally, the high levels of industry and academic interest in the region have generated many excellent multidisciplinary studies of these sequences, based on both the comprehensive datasets of hydrocarbon-bearing strata and the excellent surface exposures in the region. In general, all Earth models underestimate the complexity of the subsurface and hence are intrinsically inaccurate. The value of developing such models, however, lies in the improved understanding of the processes controlling sequence development gained from their application (e.g. Ahr 1973; Read 1985; Burchette & Wright 1992; Handford & Loucks 1993; Pomar 2001; Bosence 2005). Extrapolating from data rich examples into areas where data coverage is poorer obliges us to distil out the generic from the specific and to propose appropriate subsurface analogues...
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2010-04-01
    Description: A regional sequence stratigraphic model is proposed for the Oligo-Miocene Asmari and Pabdeh Formations in the Dezful Embayment of SW Iran. The model is based on both new detailed sedimentological observations in outcrops, core and well logs, and an improved high-resolution chronostratigraphic framework constrained by Sr isotope stratigraphy and biostratigraphy. A better understanding of the stratigraphic architecture distinguishes four, geographically separated types of Asmari reservoirs. Three Oligocene sequences (of Rupelian, early Chattian and late Chattian age) and three Miocene sequences (of early Aquitanian, late Aquitanian and early Burdigalian age) have been distinguished, representing a period of 15.4 Ma. The stratigraphic architecture of these sequences is primarily controlled by glacio-eustatic sea-level fluctuations, which determined the distribution of carbonates, sandstones and anhydrites in this sedimentary system. Tectonic control became important in the Burdigalian with a regional tilt down towards the NE. The lithological heterogeneity, the complex geometries, and both early and late diagenetic alterations are the basis for a classification of four main stratigraphic reference types for the Asmari Reservoirs: Type 1, sandstone dominated; Type 2, mixed carbonate-siliciclastic; Type 3, mixed carbonate-anhydrite; and Type 4, carbonate dominated. The sequence stratigraphic model predicts how and when these types change laterally from one to another.
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  • 8
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    Unknown
    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 329: 291-315.
    Publication Date: 2010-04-01
    Description: The combination of sedimentological and diagenetic data is important for the characterization of carbonate pore systems. This is particularly true for carbonates that were affected by meteoric diagenesis during sub-aerial exposure, for instance at sea-level lowstands. This diagenetic environment is commonly believed to be associated with increases in porosity, permeability and pore-throat diameters. Using data from three localities, improvement or deterioration of reservoir parameters below karst unconformities were analysed with a three-fold approach. In the first step, meteoric dissolution was characterized and early to late diagenetic products were described. In the second step, sedimentological and diagenetic data were converted to petrophysical data. In the third step, modelled climate data, in particular the occurrence of monsoon cells, in conjunction with other control mechanisms, were considered to understand the processes that controlled meteoric dissolution and later pore infill. Three case studies were analysed: (1) Lower Triassic oolites (sedimentary rocks dominated by ooids) and microbialites of the Calvorde Formation (Buntsandstein Group, Germany); (2) stacked shallowing-upward cycles of carbonate platform deposits in the Middle-Upper Triassic Mahil Formation (Arabian plate, Oman), capped by palaeosols; and (3) an Upper Triassic coral patch reef and overlying strata (Adnet, Salzburg region, Austria). Data integration allowed the establishment of three scenarios of significantly different processes related to meteoric diagenesis below unconformities: (1) increase of porosity and permeability and their preservation through time; (2) increase of porosity and permeability and subsequent pore system occlusion; and (3) decrease of porosity and permeability and creation of a barrier for pore fluids. Knowledge of the time span involved in meteoric diagenesis and the nature of the climatic regime helped to explain the origins and control mechanisms of the meteoric pore systems. The study provided evidence that a well-connected, large karst system, typical of a humid climate, is likely to be sealed subsequently by sediment and cement. Under arid climatic conditions, tight palaeosols developed at the unconformity and small karst pore systems developed which had the potential to remain open during basin evolution. Depending on the aforementioned parameters, carbonates affected by meteoric diagenesis may either become tight rocks or reservoirs.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2010-04-01
    Description: This paper describes an integrated field, petrographic and geochemical study of an Albian carbonate platform from the Basque-Cantabrian basin (northern Spain). It examines the distribution and evolution of porosity and the relationships between facies variations, sequences and variations in diagenesis. These platform carbonates were deposited on the footwall crests of active tilted blocks formed during continental rifting related to the Mesozoic opening of the Bay of Biscay and North Atlantic. The studied units document an early Albian aggradational steep-sloping platform and a late Albian, low-gradient expansive shelf separated by a hiatal unconformity spanning the middle-early late Albian (c. 5 Ma). The late Albian platform unit also exhibits a major internal unconformity. Platform geometries and facies architecture were mainly controlled by tectonics, hydrodynamic energy level and water depth. Petrographic, cathodoluminescence and geochemical analyses suggest that early meteoric diagenesis developed during sub-aerial exposure in strata below these two major unconformities. The platform carbonates have been affected during burial by a number of diagenetic processes that include four phases of dissolution, several fracture generations, and six cement sequences with development of at least 13 calcite and dolomite cement zones (Z0-Z12). A contrasting diagenetic response from the different platform environments illustrates the role of primary sediment composition and unconformity development in controlling porosity and cement distribution. Limestone stabilization and cementation were relatively early processes that were mostly completed within the first kilometre of burial depth beneath the depositional surface. Below this burial depth, fluid circulation was concentrated along restricted pathways (fractures and fault zones). Migration of hydrothermal-related fluids along fault zones created localized dolomite patches and large-scale porosity associated with cavities and collapse breccias, but did not significantly increase the small-scale porosity.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2010-04-01
    Description: Precipitation of dolomite cements in Jurassic carbonate platform sediments and slope breccias has been studied from well cores and outcrops of the central Southern Alps and central Apennines in Italy. In both areas, an initial, massive dolomite replacement was followed by multiphase precipitation of dolomite cements. The replacement occurred during burial, in a passive margin regime, in response to compaction-driven flow of formational fluids. This interpretation is based on results from fluid inclusion and stable isotope analyses which have been related to the thermal history. The dolomite cements precipitated when both areas were involved in collisional tectonics. In spite of the similar diagenetic evolution, the fluids causing dolomite cementation in each case were compositionally different. In the Alps a decrease in salinity was recorded from sea water to brackish fluids, whereas in the Apennines an increase in salinity from sea water up to 〉10% NaCl equivalent was recorded. The remarkable salinity differences in diagenetic fluids are considered to be related to the different sub-aerial relief of the two belts during dolomite precipitation. In the Alps, the dilution of fluids is related to the infiltration of meteoric waters from the mountain chain, that was widely emergent. In the Apennines, dolomite cements precipitated whilst the structural units were still widely submerged, preventing meteoric dilution of cementing fluids and promoting an increase in salinity through mixing with fluids rising from older evaporate-bearing layers. In both Alpine and Apennine cases, the same diagenetic trend is observed in thrust-fold belt and foreland basin units; in both structural systems the diagenetic events start precipitating dolomite cements in the inner part of the collision zone and then the diagenetic processes migrate towards the foreland basin along with the structural evolution of the area.
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