Concepts of Sedimentary Basins: The Evidence of Oil and Gas Fields
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 5
 - File Size:
 - 157 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1987
 
Abstract
Geosynclines have been well studied for  many years, but very little has been written  about the concepts of sedimentary basins in  spite of the vast amount of data available.  They have been regarded, perhaps, as well- understood intuitively, and therefore not  worthy of study. Many of the fundamental concepts of  geology were developed during the 19th Century  with the construction of coal mines, canals  and railways. It was a happy chance that led  railway engineers in the early days to think  that trains could not climb any but the  smallest gradient, so, in Britain at -least,  numerous railway cuttings and tunnels were  made. These exposed to view and study, in a  better form than Nature usually provides, a  great deal of interesting geology. Because of the lack of literature about  the concepts of sedimentary basins, it is not  possible to be sure what the early geologists  thought. It seems that sedimentary basins  were regarded as recording a history of  subsidence during the early stages, when a  transgressive sequence accumulated; and a  history of uplift during the later stages,  when a regressive sequence accumulated. It  seemed axiomatic that the age of folding and  faulting was younger than the rocks folded or  Faulted.
Citation
APA: (1987) Concepts of Sedimentary Basins: The Evidence of Oil and Gas Fields
MLA: Concepts of Sedimentary Basins: The Evidence of Oil and Gas Fields. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.