Salt dome


A salt dome is a type of structural dome formed when a thick bed of evaporite minerals found at depth intrudes vertically into surrounding rock strata, forming a diapir. It is important in petroleum geology because salt structures are impermeable and can lead to the formation of a stratigraphic trap.

Formation

The formation of a salt dome begins with the deposition of salt in a restricted marine basin. Because the flow of salt-rich seawater into the basin is not balanced by outflow, much to all water lost from the basin is via evaporation, resulting in the precipitation and deposition of salt evaporites. The rate of sedimentation of salt is significantly larger than the rate of sedimentation of clastics, but it is recognized that a single evaporation event is rarely enough to produce the vast quantities of salt needed to form a layer thick enough for salt diapirs to be formed. This indicates that a sustained period of episodic flooding and evaporation of the basin must occur, as can be seen from the example of the Mediterranean Messinian salinity crisis. At the present day, evaporite deposits can be seen accumulating in basins that merely have restricted access but do not completely dry out; they provide an analogue to some deposits recognized in the geologic record, such as the Garabogazköl basin in Turkmenistan.
Over time, the layer of salt is covered with deposited sediment, becoming buried under an increasingly large overburden. The overlying sediment will undergo compaction, causing an increase in density and therefore a decrease in buoyancy. Unlike clastics, pressure has a significantly smaller effect on the density of salt due to its crystal structure and this eventually leads to it becoming more buoyant than the sediment above it. The ductility of salt initially allows it to plastically deform and flow laterally, decoupling the overlying sediment from the underlying sediment. Since the salt has a larger buoyancy than the sediment above—and if a significant faulting event affects the lower surface of the salt—the salt can begin to flow vertically, forming a salt pillow. The vertical growth of these salt pillows creates pressure on the upward surface, causing extension and faulting.
Possible forces that drive the flow of salt are differential loading on the source layer and density contrasts in the overburdening sediment. Forces that resist this flow are the mass of the roof block and the block's inherent resistance to faulting, i.e., strength. To accommodate common density contrast between the overburden sediment and the salt, beginning active diapirism, the diapir height must be more than two-thirds to three-quarters the thickness of the overburden. If the diapir is narrow its height must be greater.
Eventually, over millions of years, the salt will pierce and break through the overlying sediment, first as a dome-shaped, and then a mushroom-shaped, fully formed salt diapir. If the rising salt diapir breaches the surface, it can become a flowing salt glacier. In cross section, these large domes may be anywhere from across, and extend as deep as.

Structure

Typical structures of active diapirism are a central crestal graben flanked by flaps that rotate upward and outward. Reverse faults can separate the flaps from the overburden. Normal faults create the crestal graben and propagate downward. New faults form farther outward as the dome arch becomes more intense. These structures occur beneath the surface and are not necessarily associated with the dome at the surface. Emergence of the dome will not occur unless the dome is very wide or tall relative to the overburden's thickness.

Recognizing salt domes in seismic data

If a salt dome has not pierced the surface they can be found located beneath the surface in various ways. The unique surficial structures can be observed as indicating the salt dome beneath the surface. Salt domes can also be interpreted from seismic reflection where the stark density contrast between the salt and surrounding sediments outlines the salt structures. Salt domes can also be associated with sulfur springs and natural gas vents.

Occurrence

Salt domes occur in many parts of the world where there is a sufficiently thick layer of rock salt developed. Stratigraphically, salt basins developed periodically from the Proterozoic to the Neogene.

Hormuz salt

In the Middle East, upper Neoproterozoic salt of the Hormuz Formation is associated with widespread salt dome formation in most parts of the Persian Gulf and onshore in Iran, Iraq, United Arab Emirates and Oman. The thicker salt is found in a series of basins, the Western Gulf, Southern Gulf and Oman salt basins.

Paradox basin

age salt of the Paradox Formation forms salt domes throughout the Paradox Basin in the US, which extends from eastern Utah, through southwestern Colorado into northwestern New Mexico.
An example of an emergent salt dome is at Onion Creek, Utah / Fisher Towers near Moab, Utah. A Paradox Formation salt body that has risen as a ridge through several hundred meters of overburden, predominantly sandstone. As the salt body rose, the overburden formed an anticline which fractured and eroded to expose the salt body.

Barents Sea

Offshore northern Norway in the southwestern Barents Sea, thick Upper Carboniferous–Lower Permian salt was deposited, forming salt domes in the Hammerfest and Nordkapp Basins.

Zechstein basin

In northwest Europe Upper Permian salt of the Zechstein Group has formed salt domes over the Central and Southern North Sea, extending eastwards into Germany.

Morocco–Nova Scotia

salt forms salt domes in the Essaouira Basin onshore and offshore Morocco. An equivalent salt sequence, the Argo Formation is associated with salt dome formation on the conjugate Nova Scotia margin.

Gulf of Mexico

The Middle Jurassic Louann Salt of the Gulf of Mexico has formed many salt domes in both the US and Mexican parts of the gulf. Major occurrences of salt domes are found along the Gulf Coast of the US in Texas and Louisiana. One example of an island formed by a salt dome is Avery Island in Louisiana. At present ocean levels it is no longer surrounded by the sea but it is surrounded by bayous on all sides. The Gulf Coast is home to over 500 currently discovered salt domes.

South Atlantic salt basins

During the break-up of the South Atlantic, Aptian age salt was deposited within the area of thinned crust on both the Brazilian and conjugate Angola/Gabon margins forming many salt domes.

Messinian salt

During the Messinian salinity crisis, thick salt layers were formed as the Mediterranean Sea dried out. Later deposition once the sea refilled, triggered the formation of salt domes.

Commercial uses

The rock salt that is found in salt domes is mostly impermeable. As the salt moves up towards the surface, it can penetrate and/or bend strata of existing rock with it. As these strata are penetrated, they are generally bent slightly upwards at the point of contact with the dome, and can form pockets where petroleum and natural gas can collect between impermeable strata of rock and the salt. The strata immediately above the dome that are not penetrated are pushed upward, creating a dome-like reservoir above the salt where petroleum can also gather. These oil pools can eventually be extracted, and, indeed, form a major source of the petroleum produced along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico. The first salt dome was discovered in 1900 when an exploratory oil well was drilled into Spindletop Hill near Beaumont, Texas.
The caprock above the salt domes is sometimes the site of deposits of native sulfur, which is recovered by the Frasch process.
Other uses include storing oil, natural gas, hydrogen gas, or even hazardous waste in large caverns formed after salt mining, as well as excavating the domes for uses in everything from table salt to the granular material used to prevent roadways from icing over.