--> Abstract: Paleozoic Stratigraphy and Hydrocarbon Habitat of the Arabian Plate, by G. Konert, A. M. Afifi, K. de Groot, and A. A. Al Naim; #90917 (1999).

Datapages, Inc.Print this page

KONERT, G., Shell International; A. M. AFIFI, Saudi Aramco; K. de GROOT, Shell International; and A. A. AL NAIM, Saudi Aramco (This paper summarizes the efforts of many geoscientists from Shell, Saudi Aramco and Petroleum Development Oman)

Abstract: Paleozoic Stratigraphy and Hydrocarbon Habitat of the Arabian Plate

The Paleozoic section became prospective in the early seventies when the enormous gas reserves in the Permian Khuff reservoirs were delineated in the Gulf and Zagros regions and oil was discovered in Oman. Since then, frontier exploration has targeted the Paleozoic System throughout the Middle East, driven by the need to replace oil production from maturing fields, the need to add gas reserves to meet local energy requirements, and other economic considerations.

The Paleozoic sequences were essentially deposited in continental to deep marine clastic environments at the Gondwana continental margin. Carbonates only became dominant in the Late Permian. The sediments were deposited in arid to glacial settings, reflecting the drift of the region from equatorial to high southern latitudes and back.

Following Late Precambrian rifting that formed salt basins in Oman and the Arabian Gulf region, the Cambro-Ordovician sequences were deposited on a peneplained continental platform. However, by the Late Ordovician this margin probably differentiated into two terranes along the Zagros fault zone, as indicated by the Silurian paleogeography.

The entire region was affected by the Hercynian orogeny during the Carboniferous, which caused long wave-length plate buckling in the north, block uplifts in the central region and regional uplift in the south and tectonism along the Zagros fault zone. This deformation caused widespread erosion of the Devono-Carboniferous section, and was probably caused by collision along the northern margin of Gondwana. The Paleozoic tectonic super cycle ended with the onset of break up tectonics in the Permian, and the deposition of Khuff carbonates over the eastern passive margin.

A major Paleozoic petroleum system embraces reservoir seal pairs spanning the Silurian to Permian sequences. Hydrocarbons occur in a variety of traps, and are sourced by the Silurian hot shale. A second petroleum system occurs in areas charged from Upper Precambrian source rocks in the salt basins. Hydrocarbon expulsion estimates and taking into account secondary migration losses, suggest that some 1 MMMM BOE may have been reservoired from the Silurian hot shale alone.

However, problems with deep seismic imaging and relatively tight reservoirs combined with hostile subsurface environments pose significant challenges to exploration and development. The critical success factor is the continuous innovative effort of earth scientists and subsurface engineers to find integrated technology solutions, which render the Paleozoic plays economically viable even in a low oil price environment.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90917@2000 AAPG Foundation Pratt II Conference, San Diego, California