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GIS in an Overview of Iraq Petroleum Geology
By
Jingyao Gong1 and Larry Gerken2
Search and Discovery Article #10043 (2003)
1AAPG, Tulsa, OK, USA ([email protected])
2Newfield Exploration Company, Tulsa, OK, USA ([email protected])
Georeferenced maps of Iraq, almost entirely from AAPG publications, are presented herein to show the overall framework of this country within a region that contains vast petroleum resources and to show some features of representative fields. Several maps of fields are accompanied by cross-sections; correlation diagrams for Northern and Southern Iraq are presented along with a tabulation of the various producing stratigraphic units. For presentation, each map utilizes the geographic coordinate system wherein each increment of latitude and longitude is equal.*
An additional item that is presented in this preliminary compilation is a database of giant fields in Iraq, from the comprehensive databases of giant fields compiled by M.K. Horn to be incorporated in the soon-to-be-published AAPG Memoir, Giant Oil and Gas Fields of the Decade 1990-1999.
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*Maps presented herein are available in ARCview, from AAPG online bookstore (http://bookstore.aapg.org). They are accompanied by the other illustrations (in PDF format), with appropriate links.
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Click to view sequence of cross sections.
Click to view sequence of structure maps.
Click to view sequence of cross sections.
Geologic ConsiderationsIraq is part
of the Zagros and Arabian sedimentary provinces, according to St. Reservoirs range in age from Miocene to Triassic. Paleozoic petroleum systems are known to exist in parts of northwest Iraq (Konert et al., 2001) and possibly in the west as well (Beydoun, 1991). Stratigraphic column for Northern Iraq is given in Figure 14. A diagram of Middle Jurassic to Mid-Cretaceous strata in Southern Iraq is presented in Figure 16. Producing stratigraphic units are shown in Figure 17. Both carbonates and sandstones are well represented as reservoir rocks. Sandstones are commonly more significant as reservoirs outside the main part of the Zagros province, whereas carbonates are dominant in the main part of the Zagros. Miocene-Oligocene-Eocene are most likely to be productive southwest of the ãmountain frontä (Versfelt, 2001), where the Miocene evaporite (seal) is preserved (Figure 6). Source rocks have been identified in the Eocene-Paleocene, Upper Cretaceous, Mid- to Lower Cretaceous, Upper Jurassic, Middle Jurassic, and Triassic (Versfelt, 2001). Silurian source rock has been documented in western/northwestern Iraq (Konert et al., 2001). As shown in the database of giant fields of Iraq (Table 1) (M.K. Horn, 2003), there are 28 giant fields in Iraq; 27 are classified as oil fields. Discovered in 1953, the largest field is Rumaila (Figure 15), 9th largest in the world (3rd largest oil field) with 22 BOE. It is in Southern Iraq and the Arabian sedimentary province. Kirkuk (Figures 8 and 9), the second largest Iraqi field with 17 BOE, is in Northern Iraq and the Zagros province. Discovered in 1927, it is the 17th largest field (8th largest oil field) in the world. Ultimate recovery from the giant fields of Iraq is estimated to be 85 BOE; for comparison, the estimate for North Dome Gas Field in Qatar is 160 BOE, and 97 BOE for Ghawar Oil Field in Saudi Arabia. Remaining recovery, or reserves, for the Iraqi giant fields is estimated to be 41 BOE (Horn, 2003), or approximately one-half of the ultimate recovery. More than a decade ago, ultimate recoverable petroleum reserves of the Arabian Plate region was estimated to be almost 900 BOE, with approximately 98% being in the Zagros and Arabian sedimentary provinces (Beydoun, 1991).
Al Shdidi, Saad, Gerard Thomas, and Jean Delfaud, 1995, Sedimentology, diagenesis, and oil habitat of Lower Cretaceous Qamchuqa Group, Northern Iraq: AAPG Bulletin , v. 79, p. 763-778. Beydoun. Z. R., 1991, SG 33: Arabian Plate Hydrocarbon Geology and Potential--A Plate Tectonic Approach: AAPG Studies in Geology #33, 77p.
Carmalt, S.W.,
and Bill St. El Zarka, Mohamed Hossny, Ain Zalah Field--Iraq Zagros folded zone, Northern Iraq, in Structural Traps VIII, AAPG Treatise of Petroleum Geology Atlas of Oil and Gas Fields, v. VIII, p. 57-68. Halbouty, Michel T., A.A. Meyerhoff, Robert E. King, Robert H. Dott, Sr, H. Douglas Klemme, and Theodore Shabad, 1970, World's giant oil and gas fields, geologic factors affecting their formation, and basin classification: Part I: Giant oil and gas fields, in Geology of Giant Petroleum Fields: AAPG Memoir 14, p. 502-528, Table 1. Horn, M.K., 2003, Giant fields, 1868-2003 (databases), in Giant Oil and Gas Field of the Decade 1990-1999, AAPG Memoir (in press). Ibrahim, M.W., 1983, Petroleum geology of Southern Iraq: AAPG Bulletin, v. 67, p. 97-130. Konert, G., A.M. Afifi, S.A. Al-Hajri, K. de Groot, A.A. Al Naim, and H.J.Droste, Paleozoic stratigraphy and hydrocarbon habitat of the Arabian Plate, in Petroleum Provinces of the Twenty First Century: AAPG Memoir 74, p. 483-515. Majid, A. Hamid, and Jan Veizer, 1986, Deposition and chemical diagenesis of Tertiary carbonates, Kirkuk oil field, Iraq: AAPG Bulletin, v. 70, p. 898-913.
St.
Versfelt, Porter, L.,
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