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File:ZagrosMtns SaltDome ISS012-E-18774.jpg

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Summary

Description

Astronaut photo of the southwestern edge of the Zagros Mountains featuring salt domes (the white section in the middle and the bump on the left). North is to the right. Text from NASA: The Zagros Mountains in southwestern Iran present an impressive landscape of long linear ridges and valleys. Formed by collision of the Eurasian and Arabian tectonic plates, the ridges and valleys extend hundreds of kilometers. Stresses induced in the Earth’s crust by the collision caused extensive folding of the preexisting layered sedimentary rocks. Subsequent erosion removed softer rocks, such as mudstone (rock formed by consolidated mud) and siltstone (a slightly coarser-grained mudstone) while leaving harder rocks, such as limestone (calcium-rich rock consisting of the remains of marine organisms) and dolomite (rocks similar to limestone containing calcium and magnesium). This differential erosion formed the linear ridges of the Zagros Mountains. The depositional environment and tectonic history of the rocks were conducive to the formation and trapping of petroleum, and the Zagros region is an important part of Persian Gulf production.

This astronaut photograph of the southwestern edge of the Zagros mountain belt includes another common feature of the region—a salt dome (Kuh-e-Namak or “mountain of salt” in Farsi). Thick layers of minerals such as halite (common table salt) typically accumulate in closed basins during alternating wet and dry climatic conditions. Over geologic time, these layers of salt are buried under younger layers of rock. The pressure from overlying rock layers causes the lower-density salt to flow upwards, bending the overlying rock layers and creating a dome-like structure. Erosion has spectacularly revealed the uplifted tan and brown rock layers surrounding the white Kuh-e-Namak to the northwest and southeast (center of image). Radial drainage patterns indicate another salt dome is located to the southwest (image left center). If the rising plug of salt (called a salt diapir) breaches the surface, it can become a flowing salt glacier. Salt domes are an important target for oil exploration, as the impermeable salt frequently traps petroleum beneath other rock layers.
Date
Source http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3?img_id=17245
Author NASA
Permission
(Reusing this file)
US government, public domain
Object location28° 15′ 00″ N, 51° 42′ 00″ E Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMapinfo

Licensing

Public domain
This file is in the public domain in the United States because it was created by the Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, of the NASA Johnson Space Center. NASA copyright policy states that "NASA material is not protected by copyright unless noted". (NASA media use guidelines or Conditions of Use of Astronaut Photographs). Photo source: ISS012-E-18774.

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Zagros Mountains featuring salt domes

28 February 2006

28°15'0"N, 51°42'0"E

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current16:31, 27 April 2006Thumbnail for version as of 16:31, 27 April 20061,000 × 673 (277 KB)Holly Cheng{{Information | Description=Astronaut photo of the southwestern edge of the w:Zagros Mountains featuring w:salt domes (the white section in the middle and the bump on the left). | Source=http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/images.p

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