Structural
Style and Growth History in Saudi Arabia
By
Hong-Bin Xiao1, Abdulla A. Bokhari1, Randall G. Demaree2
(1) Saudi Aramco, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia (2) Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia
Most of the hydrocarbon fields in Saudi Arabia are basement-cored uplifts.
These structures are compressional, typically low relief, bounded by steep
frontal fault, and backthrust in some cases. The most common
trap
type is
four-way closure, although subcrop-
trap
, fault-
trap
, and
stratigraphic
trap
are
becoming increasingly important.
We quantitatively assessed growth history of each structure by adapting the
concept of growth index, which is a numerical ratio of strata thickness in
trough over crest. Every structure was given a set of four numbers (starting
from 1 indicating no growth), each indicating the severity of one of four
orogenic deformation: Carboniferous (Hercynian Orogeny), Early Triassic (Zagros
Rifting), Late Cretaceous (First Alpine Orogeny), and Tertiary (Second Alpine
Orogeny) time, respectively. Maps of
structural
growth indicate that most of the
structures have persisted from Carboniferous to Holocene. The maximum principal
horizontal stress in Late Cretaceous seems to be oriented NW-SE direction and
was responsible for maximum growth of some of NE-SW oriented structures such as
Abqaiq, Harmaliyah, Shaybah, and Tukhman. The Central Arabian Arch has long been
a strain compartment boundary where the strongest deformation occurs and
persists, and where most E-vergent structures are located to the north and most
W-vergent structures are to the south.