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Preface | ||
Ch. 1 | Principles of Carbonate Diagenesis | 1 |
Ch. 2 | Dolomitization and the Character of Hydrocarbon Reservoirs: Devonian of Western Canada | 33 |
Ch. 3 | Losses and Gains in Weathering Profiles and Duripans | 95 |
Ch. 4 | Microbial and Organic Processes | 125 |
Ch. 5 | Clay Mineral Diagenesis | 161 |
Ch. 6 | Pore-water Flow and Mass Transfer of Solids in Solution in Sedimentary Basins | 189 |
Ch. 7 | Stable Isotopic Constraints on Sandstone Diagenesis in the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin | 223 |
Index | 275 |
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Add Quantitative Diagenesis: Recent Developments and Applications to Reservoir Geology, Reservoirs generally consist of sandstones or carbonates exhibiting heterogeneities caused by a wide range of factors. Some of these formed depositionally (e.g. as channels, palaeosols, clay seams or salts), others may be diagenetic in origin (e.g. carbon, Quantitative Diagenesis: Recent Developments and Applications to Reservoir Geology to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Quantitative Diagenesis: Recent Developments and Applications to Reservoir Geology, Reservoirs generally consist of sandstones or carbonates exhibiting heterogeneities caused by a wide range of factors. Some of these formed depositionally (e.g. as channels, palaeosols, clay seams or salts), others may be diagenetic in origin (e.g. carbon, Quantitative Diagenesis: Recent Developments and Applications to Reservoir Geology to your collection on WonderClub |