Reef-stromatolites-evaporites facies relationships from middle miocene examples of the gulf of Suez and the red sea

Author(s):  
C.L.V. Monty ◽  
J.M. Rouchy ◽  
A. Maurin ◽  
M.C. Bernet-Rollande ◽  
J.P. Perthuisot
Keyword(s):  
Red Sea ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geraint Hughes ◽  
Osman Varol

<p>Marine sediments deposited in response to the Neogene opening of the Red Sea during divergence of the African-Arabian plate margin provide micropalaeontological chronological evidence to calibrate synchronous palaeoenvironmental events from the Gulf of Suez to the Gulf of Aden. This facility provides insights to the timing and relative rates of tectonic subsidence associated with the rifting episodes of the region. Biostratigraphic index forms include planktonic and benthonic foraminifera and calcareous nannofossils. These, combined with various associated microfossils and macrofossil fragments, permit interpretation of a range of depositional environments that span intertidal to bathyal regimes. Onset and recovery from various hypersaline events are similarly interpreted by integrating microfossils and lithology. Following an episode of emergence and sporadic volcanicity, subsidence and the first Neogene marine transgression created brackish to shallow marine lagoons during the Early Miocene (Foraminiferal Letter Stage Upper Te). Rapid subsidence and accumulation of deep marine mudstones, of local hydrocarbon source-rock quality, with thinly interbedded siliciclastic and calciclastic debris flows commenced in the Early Miocene (Planktonic foraminiferal zones N5-N8; Nannofossil zones NN3-NN5). The debris flows increased in abundance and provide good hydrocarbon reservoirs. The Gulf of Suez and Red Sea experienced episodic isolation from the Indian Ocean during the latest Early Miocene and earliest Middle Miocene (Planktonic foraminiferal zones N8-N9; Nannofossil zone NN5 Foraminiferal Letter Stage Middle-Upper Tf1), resulting in hypersaline events with precipitation of submarine gypsum and halite. The isolation is attributed to constriction of the southern Red Sea, in the vicinity of the Bab El Mandab Straits, by eustatic sea level fall as well as probable tectonic activity; the synchronous Gulf of Aden succession does not display evidence for such hypersaline events. A prolonged hypersaline phase extended over most of the Middle Miocene, for which absence of biostratigraphic data precludes age control. During the latest Middle Miocene to Late Miocene, rejuvenation of the hinterland cause rapid deposition of terrestrial and fluviatile coarse and fine siliciclastics, with similar biostratigraphic paucity except for rare diatoms and palynomorphs. Renewed subsidence, associated with opening of the Aqaba Fault, combined with eustatic sea level rise caused marine deposition to recommence in the Pliocene.</p>


GeoArabia ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 59-108
Author(s):  
G. Wyn Hughes

ABSTRACT The Saudi Arabian Red Sea stratigraphy consists of a variety of lithologies that range from evaporites, deep- and shallow-marine siliciclastics and carbonates, biostratigraphically constrained to range from the Late Cretaceous, Campanian, to Late Pliocene. The succession consists of pre-rift Mesozoic and Palaeogene sediments, and syn-rift and post-rift late Palaeogene and Neogene sediments. Three main episodes of shallow-marine carbonate deposition can be determined, including those of the earliest Early Miocene Musayr Formation of the Tayran Group later Early Miocene Wadi Waqb Member of the Jabal Kibrit Formation and of the Pliocene Badr Formation of the Lisan Group. The Midyan area of the northern Red Sea offers a unique window into the Cretaceous and Miocene succession that is otherwise only present in the deep subsurface. The sediments are of hydrocarbon interest because of the presence of source rocks, siliciclastic and carbonate reservoirs. The Wadi Waqb reservoir is hosted within the Wadi Waqb Member of the Jabal Kibrit Formation, and is of latest Early Miocene to possibly earliest Middle Miocene age. It is considered to have formed a fringing reef complex that formed a steep, fault-influenced margin to a narrow platform, similar to Recent coralgal reefs of the Red Sea. The Wadi Waqb Member is exposed on the east and west flanks of the Ifal Plain. The bioclasts are considered to have traveled as a submarine carbonate debris flow 25 km from their presumed source to the east and possibly the west, and consist mostly of rhodoliths, echinoid and coral fragments together with the benthonic larger foraminifera Operculinella venosa, Operculina complanata, Heterostegina depressa and Borelis melo. The planktonic foraminifera include species of Globigerina, Globigerinoides and Praeorbulina; no specimens of the Middle Miocene planktonic foraminiferal genus Orbulina have yet been encountered in the thin sections. The presence of Borelis melo melo, and of B. melo curdica within the region, indicates a latest Early Miocene age. No specimens of the age-equivalent larger benthonic foraminiferal genera Miogypsina or Lepidocyclina have been observed, and this is consistent with evidence from the Wadi Waqb equivalent carbonates elsewhere in the Red Sea and Gulf of Suez. In the east, the Wadi Waqb is represented by discontinuous fringing rhodolith and coral reefs that are welded to steep cliffs of granitic basement. In Wadi Waqb, located in hills that form the western margin to the Ifal Plain, the Wadi Waqb carbonates consist of packstones containing autochthonous planktonic foraminifera and abundant shallow-marine microfossils that are considered to have been derived from the basement-founded rhodolith and coral reefs in the east. The Wadi Waqb reservoir is located beneath the central part of the Ifal Plain, approximately midway down a ramp between the in situ rhodolith-coral reefs and the mixed allochthonous and autochthonous facies at Wadi Waqb. The reservoir contains biofacies similar to those exposed in Wadi Waqb, and indicative of a deep-marine environment, in excess of 50 m water depth. The Wadi Waqb carbonates display sedimentological and petrographic features that closely resemble those described from stratigraphically equivalent carbonates from the localities along the west coast of the Gulf of Suez, including Abu Shaar, where three depositional facies have been defined. It is apparent that these shallow-marine carbonates were established along the west and east rift margins of the Red Sea-Gulf of Suez rift complex prior to their dislocation during the Late Miocene and Pliocene by the left-lateral Aqaba faulting.


2018 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.A. El-Ganainy ◽  
M.T. Khalil ◽  
E.E.E. El-Bokhty ◽  
M.A. Saber ◽  
F.A.A. Abd El-Rahman
Keyword(s):  
Red Sea ◽  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed E. Radwan ◽  
Souvik Sen

Abstract The purpose of this study is to evaluate the reservoir geomechanics and stress path values of the depleted Miocene sandstone reservoirs of the Badri field, Gulf of Suez Basin, in order to understand the production-induced normal faulting potential in these depleted reservoirs. We interpreted the magnitudes of pore pressure (PP), vertical stress (Sv), and minimum horizontal stress (Shmin) of the syn-rift and post-rift sedimentary sequences encountered in the studied field, as well as we validated the geomechanical characteristics with subsurface measurements (i.e. leak-off test (LOT), and modular dynamic tests) (MDT). Stress path (ΔPP/ΔShmin) was modeled considering a pore pressure-horizontal stress coupling in an uniaxial compaction environment. Due to prolonged production, The Middle Miocene Hammam Faraun (HF) and Kareem reservoirs have been depleted by 950-1000 PSI and 1070-1200 PSI, respectively, with current 0.27-0.30 PSI/feet PP gradients as interpreted from initial and latest downhole measurements. Following the poroelastic approach, reduction in Shmin is assessed and reservoir stress paths values of 0.54 and 0.59 are inferred in the HF and Kareem sandstones, respectively. As a result, the current rate of depletion for both Miocene reservoirs indicates that reservoir conditions are stable in terms of production-induced normal faulting. Although future production years should be paid more attention. Accelerated depletion rate could have compelled the reservoirs stress path values to the critical level, resulting in depletion-induced reservoir instability. The operator could benefit from stress path analysis in future planning of infill well drilling and production rate optimization without causing reservoir damage or instability.


Zootaxa ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 4509 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
DANIEL GOLANI ◽  
RONALD FRICKE

The current checklist provides for each species of the Red Sea its records in the Gulf of Suez, Gulf of Aqaba, Red Sea main basin and its general distribution.This new checklist of Red Sea fishes enumerates 1207 species, representing 164 families. Of these, 797 species were recorded from the Gulf of Aqaba and 339 from the Gulf of Suez. The number of species from the Gulf of Suez is evidently lower than the actual number not including 27 Lessepsian (Red Sea) migrants to the Mediterranean that most likely occur in the Gulf. The current list includes 73 species that were newly described for science since the last checklist of 2010. The most specious Osteichthyes families are: Gobiidae (134 species), Labridae (66), Apogonidae (59), Serranidae (including Anthiadinae) (44), Blenniidae (42), Carangidae (38), Muraenidae (36), Pomacentridae (35), Syngnathidae (34), Scorpaenidae (24) and Lutjanidae (23). Among the families of Chondrichthyes, the most specious families are the Carcharhinidae (18 species) and Dasyatidae (11). The total number of endemic species in the Red Sea is 174 species, of these, 34 species are endemic to the Gulf of Aqaba and 8 to the Gulf of Suez. 


2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 405-411 ◽  
Author(s):  
Azza A. El-Ganainy ◽  
Mohamed H. Yassien

2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Mahmoud H. M. Ahmed ◽  
Magdy T. Khalil ◽  
Sahar F. Mehanna ◽  
Sameh B. El-Kafrawy ◽  
Asaar S. H. El-Sherbeny

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