--> Abstract: Chronostratigraphy and Hydrocarbon Habitat Associated with the Jurassic Carbonates of Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, by A. S. Alsharahan and G. L. Whittle; #90956 (1995).

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Abstract: Chronostratigraphy and Hydrocarbon Habitat Associated with the Jurassic Carbonates of Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

A. S. Alsharahan, Gregory L. Whittle

Deposition of Jurassic epeiric shelf carbonates and evaporites were controlled by epeirogenic movement and sea level fluctuations which formed an excellent combination of source rocks, reservoirs and seals in Abu Dhabi.

At the end of the Triassic, a relative drop in sea level, caused by eustatic sea level lowering in conjunction with minor tectonic uplift, resulted in non-deposition or erosion. In the Toarcian, deposition of carbonates and terrigenous clastics produced the Marrat Formation. In the mid-Aalenian, a drop in sea level eroded much of the Marrat and some of the Triassic in offshore U.A.E. The deposition of the Hamlah Formation followed, under neritic, well-oxygenated conditions. The Middle Jurassic was characterized by widespread, normal marine shelf carbonates which formed the cyclic Izhara and Araej formations (reservoirs). In the Upper Jurassic, the carbonate shelf became differentiated into a broad shelf with a kerogen-rich intrashelf basin, formed in response to a eustatic rise couple with epeirogenic downwarping and marine flooding. The intrashelf basin fill of muddy carbonate sediments constitutes the Diyab Formation and its onshore equivalent, the Dukhan Formation (source rocks). In the late Upper Jurassic, the climate became more arid and cyclic deposition of carbonates and evaporites prevailed, forming alternating peritidal anhydrite, dolomite and limestone in the Arab Formation (reservoir). Arid conditions continued into the Tithonian, fostering the extensive anhydrite of the Hith Formation (seal) in a sabkha/lagoonal setting on the shallow peritidal platform, the final regressive supratidal stage of this major depositional cycle.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90956©1995 AAPG International Convention and Exposition Meeting, Nice, France