Effects of the Permian-Triassic boundary on reservoir characteristics of the South Pars gas field, Persian Gulf

2009 ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
Hossain Rahimpour-Bonab ◽  
Ashkan Asadi-Eskandar ◽  
Roshanak Sonei
Facies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen Kershaw ◽  
Tingshan Zhang ◽  
Yue Li

AbstractPermian–Triassic boundary microbialites (PTBMs) that formed directly after the end-Permian extinction in the South China Block are dominated by one structure, a lobate-form calcium carbonate construction that created extensive very thin (ca. 2–20 m thick) framework biostromes in shallow marine environments, effectively occupying the ecological position of the prior pre-extinction Permian reefs and/or associated carbonates. In the field, vertical sections show the microbialite is dendrolite (branched) and thrombolite (clotted), but because thrombolite may include branched portions, its structure is overall best classed as thrombolite. In the field and in polished blocks, the microbial material appears as dark carbonate embedded in lighter-coloured micritic sediment, where details cannot be seen at that scale. In thin section, in contrast to the largely unaltered micritic matrix, the microbial constructor is preferentially partly to completely recrystallised, but commonly passes gradationally over distances of a few mm to better-preserved areas comprising 0.1–0.2 mm diameter uneven blobs of fine-grained calcium carbonate (micrite to microsparite). The lobate architecture comprises branches, layers and clusters of blobs ca. 1–20 mm in size, and includes constructed cavities with geopetal sediments, cements and some deposited small shelly fossils. Individual blobs in the matrix may be fortuitous tangential cross sections through margins of accumulated masses, but if separate, may represent building blocks of the masses. The lobate structure is recognised here as a unique microbial taxon and named Calcilobes wangshenghaii n. gen., n. sp. Calcilobes reflects its calcium carbonate composition and lobate form, wangshenghaii for the Chinese geologist (Shenghai Wang) who first detailed this facies in 1994. The structure is interpreted as organically built, and may have begun as separate blobs on the sea floor sediment (that was also composed of micrite but is interpreted as mostly inorganic), by microbial agglutination of micrite. Because of its interpreted original micritic–microsparitic nature, classification as either a calcimicrobe (calcified microbial fossil) or a sedimentary microbial structure is problematic, so C. wangshenghaii has uncertain affinity and nature. Calcilobes superficially resembles Renalcis and Tarthinia, which both form small clusters in shallow marine limestones and have similar problems of classification. Nevertheless, Calcilobes framework architecture contrasts both the open branched geometry of Renalcis, and the small tighter masses of Tarthinia, yet it is more similar to Tarthinia than to Renalcis, and may be a modification of Tarthinia, noting that Tarthinia is known from only the Cambrian. Calcilobes thus joins Renalcis, Tarthinia and also Epiphyton (dendritic form) and others, as problematic microbial structures. Calcilobes has not been recognised elsewhere in the geological record and may be unique to the post-end-Permian extinction facies. C. wangshenghaii occurs almost exclusively in the South China Block, which lay on the eastern margin of Tethys Ocean during Permian–Triassic boundary times; reasons for its absence in western Tethys, except for comparable fabrics in one site in Iran and another in Turkey, are unknown.


2018 ◽  
Vol 49 (6) ◽  
pp. 812-824
Author(s):  
Mohammad Ali Faraji ◽  
Ali Kadkhodaie ◽  
Hossain Rahimpour-Bonab ◽  
Peter Hatherly

1979 ◽  
Vol 16 (7) ◽  
pp. 1524-1532 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. T. Tozer

Chinese geologists have correctly interpreted the sequence in south China as including the youngest known marine Permian (Changxingian Stage), followed by earliest Triassic, strata with Otoceras (Griesbachian Stage, Gangetian Substage). Most of the Changxingian ammonoids are known only from China but one recently described species, Shizoloboceras fusuiense, is evidently congeneric with Paratirolites vediensis, which characterizes latest Permian (Dorashamian) beds of the south U.S.S.R. and Iran. This indicates that the youngest Permian beds of Iran and China are correlative. Alternative correlations which have been suggested, namely with Changxingian including beds younger than Dorashamian, and Gangetian correlative with Dorashamian, are rejected. Below the Changxingian is the Lopingian (or Wuchiapingan), characterized by a variety of early otocerataceans. Lopingian is more or less correlative with Dzhulfian.South China is the only known place where ammonoids of Dzhulfian (= Lopingian), Dorashamian (= Changxingian), and Gangetian (lowermost Triassic) ammonoids occur in a formational sequence. It does not necessarily follow that the Changxingian–Gangetian interval was one of faunal continuity and continuous deposition. Paleozoic-type brachiopods that locally occur in the basal metre of the Triassic formations do not establish that the relationship between the Permian and Triassic formations is transitional. The boundary between these formations is distinct. Probably, these brachiopods are derived from the subjacent Permian strata and are not natural members of the Triassic fauna.


2021 ◽  
Vol 209 ◽  
pp. 104689
Author(s):  
Omid Falahatkhah ◽  
Ali Kadkhodaie ◽  
Ali Asghar Ciabeghodsi ◽  
David A. Wood

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