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AAPG Bulletin, V. 82 (1998), No. 6 (June 1998), P. 1173-1190.

Structure and Evolution of the Petroliferous Euphrates Graben System, Southeast Syria1

Robert K. Litak,2 Muawia Barazangi,3 Graham Previous HitBrewTop,3 Tarif Sawaf,4 Anwar Al-Imam,4 and Wasif Al-Youssef4

©Copyright 1998.  The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.  All Rights Reserved

1Manuscript received July 22, 1996; revised manuscript received May 29, 1997; final acceptance February 3, 1998.
2Institute for the Study of the Continents, Snee Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853. Present address: 218 Alden Avenue, New Haven, Connecticut 06515-2112.
3Institute for the Study of the Continents, Snee Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853.
4Syrian Petroleum Company, Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources, Damascus, Syria.

Seismic and well data for this study were kindly provided by the Syrian Petroleum Company. This research is supported by Amoco, ARCO, Exxon, Mobil, Unocal, and Conoco. D. Seber and W. Beauchamp reviewed a draft of this manuscript. We greatly appreciate the comments of reviewers T. Patton, N. Gorur, P. Yilmaz, and former Elected Editor K. Biddle that helped to improve the manuscript. Institute for the Study of the Continents contribution number 230. 

ABSTRACT

The northwest-trending Euphrates graben system is an aborted intracontinental rift of Late Cretaceous age that has subsequently been hidden by Cenozoic burial. Approximately 100 km wide, the system comprises an extensive network of grabens and half grabens extending some 160 km from the Anah graben in western Iraq to the Palmyride fold belt in central Syria, where it becomes more subdued. The youngest prerift rocks are presently at a maximum depth of about 5 km. Based primarily on interpretation of 1500 km of seismic reflection profiles and data from 35 wells, we mapped a complex network of numerous branching normal and strike-slip faults, generally striking northwest and west-northwest. Both branched and single-strand linear normal faults of generally steep dip, as well as positive and negative flower structures, are manifest on seismic sections. No single rift-bounding fault is observed; instead, a major flexure coupled with minor normal faulting marks the southwestern edge of the basin, with considerable variation along strike. To the northeast, deformation diminishes on the Rawda high near the Iraqi border.

The Euphrates graben system likely formed in a transtensional regime, with active rifting primarily restricted to the Senonian and with an estimated maximum extension of about 6 km. Minor Cenozoic inversion of some structures also is evident. Approximately 30 oil fields have been discovered in the Euphrates graben system since 1984. Recoverable reserves discovered to date reportedly exceed 1 billion barrels of oil and lesser amounts of gas. Light oil is primarily found in Lower Cretaceous sandstone reservoirs juxtaposed by normal faulting against Upper Cretaceous synrift sources and seals. 

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