Surface expressions of the Ghawar structure, Saudi Arabia

Autor: Salih Saner, Khattab G. Al-Hinai, Doğan Perinçek
Rok vydání: 2005
Předmět:
Zdroj: Marine and Petroleum Geology. 22:657-670
ISSN: 0264-8172
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2004.12.006
Popis: The Ghawar anticline is approximately 225-km long and 25-km wide in the subsurface, but the surface structural expression is not obvious. Identifying subtle structural imprints in the young Mio-Pliocene sedimentary cover is therefore of great importance in developing a structural growth model for the Ghawar field. The Ghawar area, between the Jafurah sand desert to the east and the Rubayda (Dahna) sand deserts to the west, is characterized by a rougher topography when compared to the surrounding, rather smooth, flat areas. This rough geomorphology of the structure can also be noticed on the satellite images. A geomorphologic elevation map of the area and a subsurface structural contour map of the top Arab-D (Upper Jurassic) reservoir reveal very similar geometric shapes. Calcareous sandstone deposits of the youngest Hofuf formation (Mio-Pliocene) cap the structural highs along the axis of the anticline and spectacular fractures, caves, mesas, and monumental geomorphologic features have developed in the escarpments. Fractures in the Dam formation (Middle Miocene) are not as conspicuous as in the Hofuf formation, but indigenous fractures are clearly recognized in this formation. A match between the directions of some topographic lineaments and projected surface traces of subsurface faults from seismic cross sections can be observed. However, at the field locations, faults have yet to be defined on the surface. Surface indications suggest that the structure has been active until the present day. Elevations of a bedding plane on the Shedgum plateau reveal a 0.25° dip angle, which cannot be distinguished on the surface by the human eye. The movements that occurred during the 4 million years since the Pliocene period reveal an average tilting of 0.06° per one million years.
Databáze: OpenAIRE