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Geochemistry of metal-rich brines from central Mississippi Salt Dome basin, U.S.A.

January 1, 1987

Oil-field brines are the most favored ore-forming solutions for the sediment-hosted Mississippi Valley-type ore deposits. Detailed inorganic and organic chemical and isotope analyses of water and gas samples from six oil fields in central Mississippi, one of the very few areas with high metal brines, were conducted to study the inorganic and organic complexes responsible for the high concentrations of these metals. The samples were obtained from production zones consisting of sandstone and limestone that range in depth from 1900 to 4000 m (70–120°C) and in age from Late Cretaceous to Late Jurassic. Results show that the waters are dominantly bittern brines related to the Louann Salt. The brines have extremely high salinities that range from 160,000 to 320,000 mg/l total dissolved solids and are NaCaCl-type waters with very high concentrations of Ca (up to 48,000 mg/l) and other alkaline-earth metals, but with low concentrations of aliphatic acid anions. The concentrations of metals in many water samples are very high, reaching values of 70 mg/l for Pb, 245 mg/l for Zn, 465 mg/l for Fe and 210 mg/l for Mn. The samples with high metal contents have extremely low concentrations (

Publication Year 1987
Title Geochemistry of metal-rich brines from central Mississippi Salt Dome basin, U.S.A.
DOI 10.1016/0883-2927(87)90008-4
Authors Y.K. Kharaka, A.S. Maest, W.W. Carothers, LeRoy M. Law, P. J. Lamothe, T. L. Fries
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Applied Geochemistry
Index ID 70014107
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
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