The Zechstein has significant economic importance in the
North Sea Oil province. In the southern gas basin, it forms the main cap rock to the gas fields with Rotliegend reservoirs. It also forms a reservoir in the
Auk oilfield in the central part of the North Sea. Further north, the Zechstein salt becomes
diapiric, forming salt domes which form the structure for several oil fields, such as Machar. Zechstein dolomites crop out near the coast of
County Durham, England where they are known as the
Magnesian Limestone. Just above the base of the Zechstein Group is a fairly thin layer of shale, or slate, where it has been metamorphized, known as the
kupferschiefer for its high copper content. In its unmodified form, this layer is high in sulfur compounds that are typical of silt deposited in stagnant shallow marshland. Where faults have allowed mineral-rich groundwater to circulate through this layer, the sulfur has oxidized metal ions to metallic sulfide ores. From the Middle Ages into the modern era, this thin but widely dispersed constellation of ore bodies has been of immense importance as a source of copper across much of northern Europe. The Zechstein salt layer is also used for underground gas storage in England, Germany and France. ==See also==