Burial
Diagenesis
and Thermal Maturity Evaluation of The North West Muglad Rift
Basin, Sudan
By
Osman M. Abdullatif1
(1) KFUPM, Dhahran 31261, Saudi Arabia
This study evaluates and compares the state of organic maturity and oil
generation in the northwestern part of the Muglad rift basin of interior Sudan.
Different maturity indices were utilized such as the percentage of the
expandable smectite layers, the measured organic maturity ( vitrinite
reflectance, Rock-Eval pyrolysis) and the predicted maturity from the
time-temperature (TTI) modeling. The rift basin facies consists of non-marine
cyclic sequences of lacustrine and fluvial/alluvial facies of
early
Cretaceous
to late Tertiary age.
The thermal maturity evaluation indicated progressive smectite conversion
with the increase of depth and temperature, where the percentage of smectite
layers ranges from 35% to 75%. The smectite layers decrease with the increase in
both observed and predicted maturities . Significant illitization is associated
with the
early
Cretaceous facies of Abu Gabra and Sharaf Formations. These same
formations are indicated by both observed and predicted maturity indices as
mature potential source rocks. Whereas the largely immature late Cretaceous and
Tertiary facies showed insignificant illitization. This indicates the close
relationship between smectite illitization and temperature- related changes in
the organic matter maturity. The variation of smectite illitization along the
burial profiles may indicate the effect of various controls on burial
diagenesis
such as temperature, potassium availability, inhibitor ions, permeability,
smectite composition, kinetics and time. The TTI modeling indicated that the oil
generating strata are the Aptain/Albian Abu Gabra Formation and the timing of
oil generation began in the Oligocene and continued to present time