TY - JOUR
T1 - Syn- and post-depositional influences on reservoir quality of the Aptian Dariyan Formation, eastern Persian Gulf
AU - Jafarian, Arman
AU - Kakemen, Umid
AU - Husinec, Antun
AU - Mehrabi, Hamzeh
AU - Pouyafard, Zahra
AU - Ghasemi, Mohammadfarid
AU - Senemari, Saeedeh
AU - Saboor, Abdus
AU - Wang, Chengshan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Published by The Geological Society of London for GSL and EAGE. All rights, including for text and data mining (TDM), artificial intelligence (AI) training, and similar technologies, are reserved. For permissions: https://www.lyellcollection.org/publishing-hub/permissions-policy. Publishing disclaimer: https://www.lyellcollection.org/publishing-hub/publishing-ethics.
PY - 2025/2/28
Y1 - 2025/2/28
N2 - The Aptian Dariyan (Shuaiba) Formation, a major Cretaceous reservoir in the Middle East, remains poorly understood regarding the influence of depositional facies and diagenetic processes on reservoir quality. This research addresses the gap through an integrated analysis of facies, petrophysics and geochemistry on a continuous, 104.5 m-long core from the Salman oil/gas field in the eastern Persian Gulf. Employing fully automated techniques, we identified hydraulic flow units (HFUs). We classified nine carbonate facies into three distinct facies associations, arranged from shallowest to deepest: inner ramp (lagoon and shoals), shallow open-marine mid-ramp and deep open-marine (outer ramp and intrashelf basin). These facies associations exhibit a stacking pattern delineating five third-order transgressive–regressive sequences. The identified HFUs include the barrier unit (HFU1), the baffle unit (HFU2) and the normal unit (HFU3), assessed based on lithological and petrophysical attributes. The normal unit, characterized by good storage capacity but poor to moderate flow capacity, highlights the complexity of reservoir quality. The Dariyan Formation is predominantly composed of mud-supported textures formed in warm, tropical waters. Additionally, late diagenetic cementation severely obstructed pore spaces, altered primary rock characteristics and reduced effective flow capacity.
AB - The Aptian Dariyan (Shuaiba) Formation, a major Cretaceous reservoir in the Middle East, remains poorly understood regarding the influence of depositional facies and diagenetic processes on reservoir quality. This research addresses the gap through an integrated analysis of facies, petrophysics and geochemistry on a continuous, 104.5 m-long core from the Salman oil/gas field in the eastern Persian Gulf. Employing fully automated techniques, we identified hydraulic flow units (HFUs). We classified nine carbonate facies into three distinct facies associations, arranged from shallowest to deepest: inner ramp (lagoon and shoals), shallow open-marine mid-ramp and deep open-marine (outer ramp and intrashelf basin). These facies associations exhibit a stacking pattern delineating five third-order transgressive–regressive sequences. The identified HFUs include the barrier unit (HFU1), the baffle unit (HFU2) and the normal unit (HFU3), assessed based on lithological and petrophysical attributes. The normal unit, characterized by good storage capacity but poor to moderate flow capacity, highlights the complexity of reservoir quality. The Dariyan Formation is predominantly composed of mud-supported textures formed in warm, tropical waters. Additionally, late diagenetic cementation severely obstructed pore spaces, altered primary rock characteristics and reduced effective flow capacity.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105005145746&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1144/petgeo2024-060
DO - 10.1144/petgeo2024-060
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105005145746
SN - 1354-0793
VL - 31
JO - Petroleum Geoscience
JF - Petroleum Geoscience
IS - 1
M1 - petgeo2024-060
ER -