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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Special Volumes

Abstract


Memoir 106: Petroleum Systems of the Tethyan Region, 2014
Pages 713-755

Chapter 19: Petroleum Geology of the Sultanate of Oman

Henk Droste

Abstract

With estimated reserves of ~5.5 billion bbls of oil and 30 trillion cubic feet (TCF) of gas, the Sultanate of Oman ranks among the smaller hydrocarbon producers in the Previous HitMiddleNext Hit East. However, the petroleum systems associated with these hydrocarbon accumulations are some of the most fascinating in the world as they are dominated by Pre-Cambrian Previous HitsourceNext Hit Previous HitrocksNext Hit.

The Sultanate of Oman is located on the eastern margin of the Arabian plate and is bounded on the north by the Eurasian collision zone, on the east by a transform fault with the Indian plate, and on the south by the Gulf of Aden spreading center. This part of the Arabian plate experienced more frequent and intense tectonic deformation than the interior parts of the plate, which is recorded in its stratigraphy.

Pre-Cambrian Previous HitsourceNext Hit Previous HitrocksNext Hit form the main petroleum systems, while a Cretaceous petroleum system is of only minor importance in the northwest of the country. The classical petroleum systems of the Previous HitMiddleNext Hit East, formed by Jurassic and Silurian Previous HitsourceNext Hit Previous HitrocksNext Hit, are not found to be active due to non-deposition/erosion.

Hydrocarbon Previous HitreservoirsNext Hit range in age from Pre-Cambrian to Previous HitmiddleNext Hit Cretaceous and encompass a wide range of lithologies, ranging from tropical carbonates, shallow marine, and continental siliciclastics to glacial meltwater deposits. The main oil Previous HitreservoirsNext Hit are Previous HitmiddleNext Hit Cretaceous carbonates and Permo-Carboniferous clastics, while the main gas accumulations are hosted by Cambro-Ordovician sandstones.

A crucial ingredient for the Pre-Cambrian petroleum system was the Previous HitdevelopmentNext Hit of a number of salt Previous HitbasinsNext Hit at the Pre-Cambrian–Cambrian boundary. As the main Previous HitsourceNext Hit Previous HitrocksNext Hit are located within and below the salt package, the location of salt edges and windows had a major control on hydrocarbon migration. It has been suggested that most of the hydrocarbon generation from Pre-Cambrian Previous HitsourceNext Hit Previous HitrocksNext Hit occurred before present-day Previous HitreservoirsNext Hit and traps were formed. The km-thick salt layers within these Previous HitbasinsNext Hit may have trapped hydrocarbons until later tectonic tilting, salt movement, and dissolution allowed hydrocarbon migration to shallower levels. The salt was also a key ingredient for present-day trap formation, as many traps are related to salt pillows, diapirs, or dissolution.

A complex migration history, a wide range in lithology and age of Previous HitreservoirsNext Hit, and a strong structural overprint makes the exploration and Previous HitdevelopmentNext Hit of hydrocarbons in the Sultanate of Oman a technically challenging but fascinating task.


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