Computer Modeling Of Evaporite Deposition

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Louis I. Briggs
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
12
File Size:
1529 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1967

Abstract

Evaporite rocks, salts of the more soluble ions in seawater, are deposited when seawater becomes concentrated by excess evaporation in marginal basins having restricted circulation with the open sea. The simple conceptual model of an evaporite basin (Figure 1) has a single inlet connecting the basin to the open ocean, the restriction to open circulation being caused by a bar or reef near the mouth of the inlet. As the oceanic water flows from the inlet into the basin it tends to form a thin layer of brine that spreads out over the surface of the basin brine, and as it does so, the salt concentration In the surface layer gradually increases owing to continued evaporation of the water. When the solubility products of the salts in the surface layer are exceeded, the salts precipitate and settle to the bottom of the basin, The order of precipitation follows their order of least solubility. Normally the carbonates separate first, followed by the sulfates and chlorides and the more complex double salts. In nature there is considerable overlap in their ranges of precipitation. The water flow in the basin, also shown schematically in Figure 1, diverges from the inlet essentially perpendicular to the lines of' equal salinity in the surface brine. The distribution of salts deposited in such a model will parallel the isosalinity lines, being arcuate and concave toward the inlet (1)
Citation

APA: Louis I. Briggs  (1967)  Computer Modeling Of Evaporite Deposition

MLA: Louis I. Briggs Computer Modeling Of Evaporite Deposition. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1967.

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