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7th Middle East Geosciences Conference and Exhibition
Manama, Bahrain
March 27-29, 2006
1 Abu Dhabi Company for Onshore Oil Operations (ADCO), Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, [email protected]
2 ExxonMobil Exploration Company (EMEC), Houston, TX
Important hydrocarbon accumulations occur in Upper Thamama platform carbonates of the Kharaib (Barremian and Early Aptian) and Shuaiba (Aptian) formations of Abu Dhabi. These formations contain three reservoir units bounded by low porosity/permeability dense zones.
Core descriptions of 25 wells were used to establish a sequence-stratigraphic framework of the Upper Thamama applicable to reservoir units and dense zones alike. Thirteen reservoir and eight non -reservoir (dense) lithofacies are identified from texture, grain type, sedimentary structure, and lithology. Depositional environments of reservoir units range from lower ramp to shoal crest to near-back-shoal. Dense zones (locally with features indicative of very shallow water deposition and exposure) were deposited in a restricted shallow-lagoonal setting.
The Kharaib Formation is a second-order, late transgressive sequence set, built by several
third
-
order
composite
sequences
. The Lower Shuaiba is one
third
-
order
composite sequence, deposited during a second-order transgression.
These
third
-
order
composite
sequences
consist of fourth-order parasequence sets. This framework provides insight into
distribution of “higher” and “lower” quality reservoir. In the middle Kharaib reservoir, mud-dominated, low to moderate
porosity/permeability rocks were deposited during a
third
-
order
transgression. Higher porosity/permeability grain-dominated
rocks occur in a
third
-
order
highstand.
Thickness and facies changes are minor within one field and only become obvious with a regional view. The lower Kharaib reservoir unit thins by nearly one-half from west to east, most likely due to lap-out. A facies change follows this trend: orbitolinid-rich skeletal wackestone/packstone (west) becomes bioturbated wackestone/packstone (east).
The stratigraphic framework established in this study gives insight on distribution of reservoir rocks within the ADCO concession. Further, a more “regional” view of these formations reveals facies, stratigraphic geometries, and thickness variations not obvious within one field.