--> Abstract: FMI Sedimentological Interpretation, Western Desert, Egypt - An Approach for High Resolution Facies Reservoir Anatomy, by Elie G. Haddad and Mohsen Abdel Fattah; #90105 (2010)

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AAPG GEO 2010 Middle East
Geoscience Conference & Exhibition
Innovative Geoscience Solutions – Meeting Hydrocarbon Demand in Changing Times
March 7-10, 2010 – Manama, Bahrain

FMI Sedimentological Interpretation, Western Desert, Egypt - An Approach for High Resolution Facies Reservoir Anatomy

Elie G. Haddad1; Mohsen Abdel Fattah1

(1) Schlumberger, Cairo, Egypt.

Bahariya Formation in Western Desert Egypt is one of the major complex oil bearing reservoirs in Egypt. Many discoveries have revealed the high oil potentialities of this formation.

Detailed sedimentological interpretation was performed over the imaged highly complicated and inconsistent reservoir interval for Abu Roash “G” Member and Bahariya Formation in two drilled wells, North Western Desert of Egypt.

Twenty lithofacies types were defined from the images of the two investigated wells. Individual lithofacies were defined based on detailed description of sedimentary structures from the image logs. The sand lithofacies of the Bahariya Formation and dolomite of Abu Roash “G” member were assigned pay values. The identified electrofacies are calibrated with the cored intervals in one of the two wells.

The Bahariya Formation in the studied two wells is interpreted as a tidal flat deposits and characterized by the following subenvironment: barrier bars, tidal channel and tidal flat muds. The Abu Roash “G” member is considered as a subtidal carbonates and characterized by the presence of frequent secondary dolomite.

Correlation based mainly on the data gained from FMI sedimentological facies analysis and interpretation has been carried out to through light on the lateral facies changes and consequently to solve many problems related to the reservoir complexity. The missing of some facies associations confirms the presence of faulting.