Growth Histroy and Gas Potential of the Saudi Arabian Petroleum Systems
By
Mahdi Abu Ali1, Abdul Mutaleb Al-Qahtani1
(1) Aramco, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
Integration of structural growth history with basin modeling provided possible migration scenarios of the different hydrocarbon systems. Peak oil generation for the Paleozoic has started since the early Jurassic, and peak gas generation since the early Cretaceous. Gas generation for the Mesozoic, however, has commenced since the Eocene.
Silurian
source
rock
maturity shows a progressive increase in gas generation
north of Ghawar and in the Rub' Al Khali. Jurassic
source
rock
maturity
indicates oil potential in
east
Arabia and gas in the Rub' AI-Khali.
Jurassic isopach shows basin tilt to the west due to the accumulation of
thicker sedimentary packages during the late Jurassic. Since the Tertiary,
however, reversal tilting of the Arabian Plate to the
east
could have influenced
gas migration.
Hercynian structures terminating growth at the Jurassic could have been
filled with Paleozoic oil over the greater Ghawar area. Paleozoic gas from the
south of Ghawar
source
area would have flushed oil up dip towards Central
Arabia, confirming the existing hydrocarbon finds, and filled south and west of
Ghawar with gas. Paleozoic gas from the more mature
east
of Ghawar
source
area
would have filled north Ghawar with more mature gas. Gas maturity over Ghawar
increases from south to north. Any oil filled structures over Ghawar could have
been cracked to gas.
In contrast, structures continuing growth to the present would have a higher chance capturing the later migrating gas. Determining timing of both structural growth and gas and oil migration would, therefore, significantly reduce the exploration risk for gas in Saudi Arabia.