ORGANIC GEOCHEMISTRY OF OIL AND NATURAL GAS IN THE WEST DIKIRNIS AND EL-TAMAD FIELDS, ONSHORE NILE DELTA, EGYPT: INTERPRETATION OF POTENTIAL SOURCE ROCKS

2016 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Leila ◽  
A. Moscariello
Polar Record ◽  
1969 ◽  
Vol 14 (92) ◽  
pp. 613-617
Author(s):  
Terence Armstrong

In the five years or so since earlier articles on this subject appeared in the Polar Record, much has occurred. The present note, based on Soviet press and radio reports, 1963–68, aims to summarize the most important developments since that time in the region of the west Siberian plain. Administratively, the area under consideration falls largely within Tyumenskaya Oblast'.


1990 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 184
Author(s):  
Chris J. Gaughan ◽  
John K. Warren

Interest in the Relief Sandstone as a potential economic oil-bearing sandstone is supported by excellent reservoir quality (up to 26.6 per cent porosity and 4839 md permeability). Potential source rocks are found above, below and interfingering with the Relief Sandstone. There are several occurrences of live oil bleeding from vugs and fractures in a stratigraphically higher carbonate. Traces of oil in the Relief sands, and the presence of live oil in relatively close proximity, suggests that the Relief Sandstone could host an economic oil accumulation.The majority of the Relief Sandstone was deposited in aeolian or braided fluvial environments with some tidal to shallow marine deposition in the west. Distribution of reservoir-quality sands is bimodal. In the east, porosity and permeability for the most part is very poor to average. In the west, porosity and permeability is generally good to excellent. The bulk of the economic porosity is secondary, a result of dissolution of cement and matrix, with minor porosity from leaching of grains. The lower reservoir quality in the east is due to diagenesis associated with compaction and authigenic illite. In the west, the porosity and permeability are high and generally due to dissolution of clay cement and primary matrix. In some cases where the clay has undergone less dissolution, it remains as grain rims and still blocks pore throats. This significantly reduces permeability although the porosity may remain high.


2016 ◽  
Vol 155 (4) ◽  
pp. 907-920 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. EDIRISOORIYA ◽  
H.A. DHARMAGUNAWARDHANE ◽  
STEPHEN MCLOUGHLIN

AbstractStrata exposed near Tabbowa Tank, Tabbowa Basin, western Sri Lanka have yielded the first representatives of the distinctive Permian Glossopteris flora from that country. The assemblage includes gymnosperm foliage attributable to Glossopteris raniganjensis, roots referable to Vertebraria australis, seeds assigned to Samaropsis sp., sphenophyte axes (Paracalamites australis) and foliage (Sphenophyllum emarginatum), and fern foliage (Dichotomopteris lindleyi). This small macroflora is interpreted to be of probable Lopingian (late Permian) age based on comparisons with the fossil floras of Peninsula India. Several Glossopteris leaves in the assemblage bear evidence of terrestrial arthropod interactions including hole feeding, margin feeding, possible lamina skeletonization, piercing-and-sucking damage and oviposition scarring. The newly identified onshore Permian strata necessitate re-evaluation of current models explaining the evolution of the adjacent offshore Mannar Basin. Previously considered to have begun subsiding and accumulating sediment during Jurassic time, we propose that the Mannar Basin may have initiated as part of a pan-Gondwanan extensional phase during late Palaeozoic – Triassic time. We interpret the basal, as yet unsampled, seismically reflective strata of this basin to be probable organic-rich continental strata of Lopingian age, equivalent to those recorded in the Tabbowa Basin, and similar to the Permian coal-bearing successions in the rift basins of eastern India and Antarctica. Such continental fossiliferous strata are particularly significant as potential source rocks for recently identified natural gas resources in the Mannar Basin.


2010 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Licheng Wang ◽  
Chengshan Wang ◽  
Yalin Li ◽  
Lidong Zhu ◽  
Yushuai Wei

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