sedimentary basin
Learn about this topic in these articles:
Assorted References
- formation in Precambrian
- In Precambrian: Establishing Precambrian boundaries
…dikes and the formation of sedimentary basins such as the Huronian on the U.S.-Canadian border, into which large volumes of clastic sediment (that is, sediment of predominantly clay, silt, and sand sizes) were deposited. Such sediments would have been derived by erosion of high plateaus and mountains that are characteristic…
Read More
- In Precambrian: Establishing Precambrian boundaries
- oil field location
- In petroleum: Sedimentary basins
Giant and supergiant petroleum fields and significant petroleum-producing basins of sedimentary rock are closely associated. In some basins, huge amounts of petroleum apparently have been generated because perhaps only about 10 percent of the generated petroleum is trapped and preserved. The Arabian-Iranian sedimentary…
Read More
- In petroleum: Sedimentary basins
formation of
- sedimentary facies
- In sedimentary facies
…undisturbed for many years in sedimentary basins. Whereas some such basins are small, others occupy thousands of square kilometres and usually have within them several different local depositional environments. Physical, chemical, and biological factors influence these environments, and the conditions that they produce largely determine the nature of the sediments…
Read More
- In sedimentary facies
- sedimentary rocks
- In sedimentary rock: Sedimentary environments
The sedimentary environment is the specific depositional setting of a particular sedimentary rock and is unique in terms of physical, chemical, and biological characteristics. The physical features of a sedimentary environment include water depth and the velocity and persistence of currents. Chemical characteristics…
Read More
- In sedimentary rock: Sedimentary environments
- shales
- In sedimentary rock: Origin of shales
…currents and a quiet depositional basin. Water is the common transporting medium, but ice-rafted glacial flour (silt produced by glacial grinding) is a major component in high-latitude oceanic muds, and windblown dust is prominent, particularly in the open ocean at low and intermediate latitudes. Shale environments thus include the deep…
Read More
- In sedimentary rock: Origin of shales