Sequence Stratigraphy and
Sedimentary History of the Neogene Nile
Delta
By
Ahmed N. El-Barkooky1, Mohamed A. Helal2
(1) Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt (2) Shell Egypt, Cairo, Egypt
The Neogene System is increasingly considered as the primary target for
hydrocarbon exploration in the Nile
Delta
. The present work aims at constructing
a regional stratigraphic framework to help understand the reservoir
distribution. Proximal-to-distal variation of depositional sequences are
inferred from regional, geoseismic transects calibrated by well data. Thirteen
third order sequence boundaries and 6 maximum flooding surfaces were identified.
The development of the Nile
Delta
/River system was controlled by both the
East Mediterranean basin evolution and the African Hinterland. The Nile system
started during the Late Miocene with deep canyon incision into pre-existing
Cenozoic/Mesozoic sequences leading to transportation of huge amounts of
sediments to the Mediterranean. At least three incisions are seismically
recognized with type-I sequence boundaries: the oldest is Tortonian and the
youngest is Messinian. The proximal in-fill of these canyons is thick, coarse
alluvium getting sandier with more marine influence northwards. The far reaches
of these canyon systems bear a great potential of excellent low-stand reservoir.
More than 2km thick salt is seismically defined in the far-offshore and assigned to the Late Messinian salinity crisis. In the near-offshore only few tens to hundreds of meters of evaporites exist, while almost absent from the onshore area.
Excellent Plio-Pleistocene reservoir is mainly linked to the lowstands, where
sands were conveyed to the outer belts through incised canyons in the
upper
slopes tracking to submarine fans farther northwards. Mega-slumps were
particularly active during Late Pliocene to Recent. They form significant
stratigraphic packages in the lower-slopes and basin
plain
areas.