LITHO- AND MICROFACIES OF UPPER JURASSIC CARBONATE ROCKS OUTCROPPING IN CENTRAL SAUDI ARABIA

1986 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 195-206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saleh M. Okla
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saleh Ahmed ◽  
Luis González ◽  
Johannes Jozef Gerardus Reijmer ◽  
Ammar ElHusseiny

<p>In terms of reservoir properties distribution carbonate rocks are very heterogeneous. Moreover, the types of porosity in carbonate rocks is very diverse. In our study of the Upper Marrat Formation near Khasm-adh-Dhibi (central Saudi Arabia) we have documented the pore system complexity and are deconvolving the impact of various post-depositional processes on porosity and permeability evolution of the formation. The Upper Marrat Formation is exposed in the central part of the Arabian plate in a north-south elongated mountain belt. It forms the lower part of the thick Jurassic petroleum-rich succession. The sediments forming the Upper Marrat Formation were deposited during the Early Jurassic time, the Toarcian. The Upper Marrat Formation shows fossiliferous biomicrite to sparse biomicrite carbonates with an evaporite deposit at the top. It is bounded by clayey units at both the top and the base. In general, because of the muddy matrix of the Upper Marrat, sediments are very tight and show low permeability. During the last 175 My, the Upper Marrat has been subjected to a series of diagenetic and tectonic processes. The initial micro- and intergranular porosity was reduced due to early compaction and cementation, however, during later diagenesis and tectonism, porosity and permeability were enhanced. The dominant diagenetic porosity in the Upper Marrat sediments is vuggy porosity, followed by fabric selective intragranular porosity. Many of the horizons in the Upper Marrat are heavily burrowed and mostly filled with sand-sized grains showing a higher porosity than the matrix. Dolomite is limited to evaporite strata and contain extensive inter-crystalline porosity produced during dolomite formation. Tectonism has enhanced porosity through the development of micro- and macro-fractures.  The different sized and orientated micro-fractures are important while they enhance permeability by connecting different pore types. Then extensive macro-fracture network has a major impact on the reservoir qualities, both porosity and permeability. The heavily fractured formation shows numerous fractures sets with NNE to SSW and ENE to WNW orientations. Fractures are mostly vertical to near-vertical; they are nearly all open, and often crosscut beds, or end at bedding planes. These fractures are the most abundant porosity type and their connectivity results in a very high permeability. In conclusion, initial porosity and permeability, and subsequent diagenetic and tectonic processes reduced and enhanced the porosity and permeability development of the sediments of the Early Jurassic Upper Marrat Formation.</p>


2013 ◽  
Vol 77 ◽  
pp. 151-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yehia H. Dawood ◽  
Mahmoud A. Aref ◽  
Mohammed H. Mandurah ◽  
Ahmed Hakami ◽  
Mohammed Gameil

2013 ◽  
Vol 734-737 ◽  
pp. 366-372
Author(s):  
Wei Yin

The Afghan-Tajik Basin is an intermontane depression between the mountain ranges of Gissar and Pamirs, and Jurassic system and Tertiary system are rich in large oil & gas resources. In order to assure sustainable supply of oil & gas from Central Asia, we deeply researched hydrocarbon geology characteristics and resource potentials. The basin belongs to paralic sedimentary environment, and develops 3 sedimentary strata: Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Tertiary. Afghan-Tajik Basin develops 3 main source rocks including clastic rocks of Jurassic, carbonate rocks of Cretaceous and mudstone rocks of Eocene. The basin develops 2 plays: Jurassic-Cretaceous play is gas containing one, and Tertiary play is oil containing one. Plaster stone and salt rock of upper Jurassic are regional cap rocks of Jurassic-Cretaceous gas pool, and creaming mudstone and muddy limestone of Cretaceous and Tertiary are regional or partial cap rocks. Migration and accumulation of hydrocarbon occur in the late Cretaceous and early Pliocene epoch. Afghan-Tajik Basin has larger exploration potentials, and residual resources are 2.4¡Á108t. The potential zones are as follows, south part of basin, oil-gas structures of post-salt, reef limestone of pre-salt, and litho-stratigraphic traps.


GeoArabia ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 53-84
Author(s):  
Hassan Eltom ◽  
Osman Abdullatif ◽  
Mohammed Makkawi ◽  
Asaad Abdulraziq

ABSTRACT Outcrop analogs are used to improve the characterization of reservoir stratigraphy, to understand subsurface facies architecture and heterogeneity, and to overcome the limitations associated with large inter-well spacing within individual oil fields. This study characterized and modeled outcropping strata equivalent to the Upper Jurassic Arab-D carbonate reservoir in Central Saudi Arabia. The study presents qualitative and quantitative sedimentological and petrographic descriptions of lithofacies associations and interprets them within a high-order stratigraphic framework using geostatistical modeling, spectral gamma-ray, geochemistry, petrography and micropaleontology. The sedimentological studies revealed three lithofacies associations, which are interpreted as a gentle slope platform depositional environment comprising nine high-frequency sequences. The biocomponents of the study area show a lower degree of diversity than the subsurface Arab-D reservoir; however, some key biofacies are present and provide indications of the nature of the paleoenvironments. The geochemical results show a strong correlation between the major and trace elements and the reservoir facies, and suggest that the concentrations of elements and their corresponding spectral gamma-ray logs follow the same general upward-shoaling pattern. The 3-D geocellular model captures small-scale reservoir variability, which is reflected in the petrophysical data distribution in the model. This investigation increases the understanding of the stratigraphy of the Arab-D reservoir and provides a general framework for zonation, layering, and lateral stratigraphic correlations.


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