1978
DOI: 10.1111/j.1747-5457.1978.tb00613.x
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FUTURE HYDROCARBON EXPLORATION ON CONTINENTAL MARGINS AND PLATE TECTONICS

Abstract: Continental margins, the border zones between continents and oceans, are preferred sites for hydrocarbon accumulations throughout geologic history. Passive Atlantic‐type margins are found worldwide. Active Pacific‐type margins exist together with passive margins where endogenous vertical crustal mobility took place. Vertical mobility is preferred over lateral mobility. Plate‐tectonic hypotheses are doubted. Exploration for gas and oil must be based on sound data. Kontinentalränder, die Grenzen zwischen Kontine… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Pratsch [7] has addressed the western continental margin as a passive Atlantic type margin. The western Indian offshore region is characterized by a series of sedimentary basins.…”
Section: Geological Setting Of the Western Indian Offshorementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pratsch [7] has addressed the western continental margin as a passive Atlantic type margin. The western Indian offshore region is characterized by a series of sedimentary basins.…”
Section: Geological Setting Of the Western Indian Offshorementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, there is a general lack of recognition of an interrelation between primary forces and secondary effects. Further, attempts to find or identify continuous Caledonian fold belts or one common fold belt may fail if Caledonian deformation did not produce fold belts, but instead a system of individual smaller blocks, each with its own history of deformation and metamorphism, as found along present continental margins (Pratsch, 1978). T h e reconstruction of Paleozoic paleogeography is affected by the common picture of a northern "Old Red Continent" (Weggen, 1978), whereas in fact marine areas or even small Paleozoic ocean areas may have existed in NW Europe.…”
Section: Previous Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This applies equally to continent-ocean, oceanocean. and intra-continental settings (Pratsch, 1978). In the Caledonian system.…”
Section: I77mentioning
confidence: 99%