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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Geologic Setting for Additional Paleozoic
Petroleum
Potential in the Middle East
Petroleum
Potential in the Middle EastBy
The greater Middle East Sedimentary Basin holds about 60% of world-wide oil reserves, and in recent years has produced up to nearly 40% of world-wide annual oil production, depending on changing political and economic conditions in the Middle East and elsewhere.
For approximately half a century most oil has been produced from Upper Jurassic Carbonates and Middle to Lower Cretaceous Carbonates in Saudi Arabia, Iran, and the Emirates, from Lower Cretaceous deltaic sandstones in Iraq, Kuwait, and northern Saudi Arabia, and from Lower Miocene to Eocene carbonate reservoirs in Iran and Iraq.
Beginning in 1989 and 1990 this picture
began to change significantly. Major
to giant-sized Paleozoic discoveries of oil,
plus gas and condensate, were reported
on shelf areas west and southwest of the
main Jurassic producing fields of Saudi
Arabia. As far north as
Jordan
and
Turkey, other discoveries of unknown
commerciality, have been reported from
Permian, Carboniferous and Devonian
sandstone reservoirs.
Some of these are destined to become major or giant sized producing fields. For example, Saudi Aramco's Hawtah discovery, southwest of Riyadh, is scheduled to start producing in 1994 at a rate of 150,000 BOPD from Permo-Carboniferous sandstones.
Several geologic traits favor further
Paleozoic oil discoveries along the western
shelf-slope of the Middle East Basin.
Pre-Hercynian subcrop
geology
, with
known major north-trending fault blocks,
the presence of oil-prone, mature
Silurian source rocks in adjacent subbasins,
known Triassic and younger
isochron thinning and compaction over
old structural highs and old topographic
highs, and structural interference patterns
between regional Paleozoic north-south
axes and late Cretaceous-Tertiary
northwest trending structures combine
to create a strong geologic rationale for
expanding current Paleozoic exploration
northward beyond the borders of Saudi
Arabia into parts of Iraq, Iran,
Jordan
,
Syria, and Turkey, and to the south, in
certain structurally higher parts of the
Emirates.
Selective areas are prospective for Paleozoic oil, but thermally overmature areas will, of course, be largely prospective for gas. Preliminary maturation fairways have been mapped regionally, to highlight the oil potential areas.
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