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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Oil Occurrence in Oman: Oil-Bearing
Sediments of Gondwana Glaciation
By
More than 3.5 billion bbl of oil in place have so far been discovered in
reservoirs of the Al Khlata
Formation
of the
Permian-Carboniferous lower Haushi Group in south
Oman.
Glacially striated pavements and boulders in exposures
at Al Khlata in east-central Oman confirmed previous
interpretations that the
formation
is, at least partly, of glacial
origin. Core and
wireline
-log data from some 500 wells that
penetrate the
formation
show that glacial facies are widespread
in the subsurface. Shales with varve-like laminations
and dropstones are present in two main layers which extend
over the larger part of south Oman and are perhaps the
most diagnostic facies. Diamictites are also widespread, and
some, which can be correlated as sheets over thousands of
square kilometers, are interpreted as true tillites. Other
diamictites are interbedded with shales with varve-like
laminations or unbedded siltstones and are interpreted as
subaqueous glacial deposits.
Ten sedimentary facies have been described in cores
and outcrops. An important result of this study is a formal
scheme to interpret these facies from
wireline
logs using
quantitative analysis of density and neutron logs and
qualitative information from other logs.
Lateral facies relationships are complicated by syndepositional salt withdrawal and dissolution, paleorelief on the basal unconformity, and intraformational unconformities beneath regionally extensive tillites. At least three glacial phases can be recognized; an early phase, represented only by erosional remnants of diamictites, and two later phases, the last of which extended over the whole of Oman south of the Oman Mountains. Deglaciation is represented by a regional shale bed sharply overlying the diamictite sheet of this last glaciation.
Oil occurrence can be related to three northwest-southeast striking facies belts. (1) In the South Oman salt basin, deposits consist of sands, pebbly sands, and diamictites deposited in glaciofluvial environments. This sequence lacks good seals. (2) In the downdip part of the basin's eastern flank, interbedded sands, silts, shales with varue-like laminations, and diamictites represent glaciolacustrine deposition at ice margins and in meltwater deltas. This belt contains interbedded reservoirs and seals, and includes the largest number of oil accumulations. (3) Updip in the eastern flank area, several-hundred-meter thick siltstones and claystones with thin turbiditic sandstones represent a belt of persistent glacio-lacustrine deposition, probably in the axis of a salt dissolution syncline. This belt contains few oil accumulations.
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