Evidence of multiple evaporite recycling processes in a salt‐tectonic context,Sivas Basin,Turkey |
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Authors: | Alexandre Pichat Guilhem Hoareau Jean‐Paul Callot Etienne Legeay Kaan Sevki Kavak Sidonie Révillon Corinne Parat Jean‐Claude Ringenbach |
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Affiliation: | 1. Laboratoire des Fluides Complexes et leurs Réservoirs‐IPRA, E2S‐UPPA, Total, CNRS, Université de Pau et des Pays de l'Adour, UMR5150, Pau, France;2. CSTJF, avenue Larribau, Total SA, Pau, France;3. Department of Geological Engineering, Cumhuriyet University, Sivas, Turkey;4. UMR6538 Laboratoire Domaines Océaniques – IUEM, SEDISOR, Plouzané, France;5. Institut des Sciences Analytiques et de Physico‐Chimie pour l'Environnement et les Matériaux, CNRS/Univ Pau & Pays Adour, UMR524, Pau, France |
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Abstract: | The isotopic composition of evaporites can shed light on their environment of precipitation and their subsequent recycling processes. In this study, we performed Sr, O and S isotopic analyses on evaporitic sulphates in the halokinetic Sivas Basin. The main objectives were to decipher the age and origin of the evaporites responsible for the salt tectonics, and to test whether diapir dissolution acts as the source of younger evaporitic layers in continental mini‐basins. The Sr isotopes demonstrate that the first evaporites precipitated from seawater during the Middle–Late Eocene. The similar isotopic values measured in the halokinetic domain confirm that the Eocene evaporites triggered the salt tectonics and were continuously recycled in Oligo‐Miocene mini‐basins as lacustrine to sabkha evaporites. Modern halite precipitates suggest that the dissolution and recycling of diapiric halite is ongoing. This study demonstrates the efficiency of isotopic analyses in constraining evaporite recycling processes in continental halokinetic domains. |
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