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Previous HitSilurianNext Hit Slope Turbidites: A Predictive Sequence Stratigraphic Model for the Exploration for New Accumulations of Mid-Previous HitQusaibaNext Hit Sand Reservoir, Saudi Arabia

By

 Riyadh A. Rahmani1

(1) Saudi Aramco, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia

 In central and eastern Saudi Arabia evidence suggests that deposition of Previous HitSilurianNext Hit Previous HitQusaibaNext Hit Member was dominated by slope mudstones and episodes characterized by introduction of slope and basin floor fan sandy turbidites (Mid-Previous HitQusaibaNext Hit Sand) during and following periods of sea level lowstands. These slope clinoforms prograded by downlapping on the underlying Previous HitQusaibaNext Hit “Hot Shale”, a rich hydrocarbon source rock. It is believed that at periods of lowstands, the Previous HitQusaibaNext Hit deltas, to the west, must have reached the shelf margin to form shelf-margin deltas. Sediments from these deltas spilled past the shelf break to the slope, in the form of gravity flows, to deposit the Mid-Previous HitQusaibaNext Hit Sand (MQS) amongst Previous HitQusaibaNext Hit mudstones. In northern and northwestern Saudi Arabia MQS turbidites have not been reported, therefore suggesting the absence of a shelf-slope break in these areas. The Previous HitQusaibaNext Hit-Sharawra unconformity, or any of the disconformities reported within the Previous HitQusaibaNext Hit Member, is here interpreted to have been caused by the same relative sea-level drop that resulted in the progradation of Previous HitQusaibaNext Hit deltas to shelf margin and lead to the delivery to the slope of MQS turbidites. Thus it is believed that basins with shelf-slope breaks formed locally in areas that experienced faster subsidence, perhaps through reactivation of older basement faults.

This shelf to basin slope relationship becomes an important tool in prediction of new MQS accumulations into unknown areas. It implies that locations of Previous HitQusaibaTop thick deltaic lobes in periods of sea level lowstand should lead in the deeper offshore to discovery of MQS turbidite accumulations.