Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Cecilia Bembibre, in Jan. 2011
We understand by deposit all those clusters, geographical spaces in which elements that may be interesting for one or more sciences lie. Reservoirs can be discovered in spaces where they were not expected to be found, as well as where they were expected to be found according to previous measurements. The deposits are always discovered and not generated since the idea is that the elements lie (usually underground), hidden.
One of the most common types of reservoirs that we can find or that we hear the most about today is the oil field. This type of site is a place in which large amounts of fossil remains of animals from prehistoric times have been converted into this material known as petroleum which is informally referred to as 'black gold'. Oil is used in most of the current economic activities and a large part of the elements that we consume daily are made with a petroleum base, for example plastic, technological elements, etc. Oil fields may require a large
investment to get the found material from the deep layers of the earth, but the wealth generated by oil makes the investment completely worth it. One of the main problems with oil is that it is not a resource renewable, so eventually it will be completely consumed.Other types of common deposits are those that have to watch with history, archeology, anthropology. These deposits are not natural remains but mainly human remains and artifacts created and buried by various causes thousands of years ago. These deposits are what allow students of these sciences to know what the style life of the human being at different times in history, usually in the Prehistory and in antiquity. In them you can find in addition to human remains that are kept in almost perfect condition, artifacts such as vessels, works of art primitive, dyes, tools, fabrics, remains of food and also animal remains.
Themes in Reservoir