Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Chemical composition of selected Kansas brines as an aid to interpreting change in water chemistry with depth

January 1, 1969

Chemical analyses of approximately 1,881 samples of water from selected Kansas brines define the variations of water chemistry with depth and aquifer age. The most concentrated brines are found in the Permian rocks which occupy the intermediate section of the geologic column of this area. Salinity decreases below the Permian until the Ordovician (Arbuckle) horizon is reached and then increases until the Precambrian basement rocks are reached. Chemically, the petroleum brines studied in this small area fit the generally accepted pattern of an increase in calcium, sodium and chloride content with increasing salinity. They do not fit the often-predicted trend of increases in the calcium to chloride ratio, calcium content and salinity with depth and geologic age. The calcium to chloride ratio tends to be asymptotic to about 0.2 with increasing chloride content. Sulfate tends to decrease with increasing calcium content. Bicarbonate content is relatively constant with depth.

If many of the hypotheses concerning the chemistry of petroleum brines are valid, then the brines studied are anomolous. An alternative lies in accepting the thesis that exceptions to these hypotheses are rapidly becoming the rule and that indeed we still do not have a valid and general hypothesis to explain the origin and chemistry of petroleum brines.

Publication Year 1969
Title Chemical composition of selected Kansas brines as an aid to interpreting change in water chemistry with depth
DOI 10.1016/0009-2541(69)90053-9
Authors R.J. Dingman, E.E. Angino
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Chemical Geology
Index ID 70011424
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
Was this page helpful?