Leaching (?) of Silurian Salt Beds in Southwestern Ontario as Evidenced in Wells Drilled for Oil and Gas

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
R. O. Grieve
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
7
File Size:
3330 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1955

Abstract

"IntroductionCALEY (1945) and Evans (1950) pointed out that certain instances of convergence between Devonian and Silurian horizons, frequently evident in wells drilled for oil and gas in Ontario, appear to be related to local thinning of salt beds in the Salina formation and they suggested that leaching of the salt beds may have occurred. Exploratory drilling by Imperial Oil Limited since 1945 has brought to light several examples of structures similar to those discussed by Caley and Evans. The writer has had the opportunity to examine cuttings and data from wells which penetrated these structures and the attempt to interpret them in the light of the theory of leaching and subsidence proposed by Landes ( 1945a) to explain the marked brecciation and deformation of Upper Silurian and Middle Devonian sediments which crop out in the Mackinac Straits region of northern Michigan has led to the observations presented in this paper."
Citation

APA: R. O. Grieve  (1955)  Leaching (?) of Silurian Salt Beds in Southwestern Ontario as Evidenced in Wells Drilled for Oil and Gas

MLA: R. O. Grieve Leaching (?) of Silurian Salt Beds in Southwestern Ontario as Evidenced in Wells Drilled for Oil and Gas. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1955.

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