Palynofacies, paleoenvironment and thermal maturity of early Silurian shales in Saudi Arabia (Qusaiba Member of Qalibah Formation)

Kaya Ertug, M. Vecoli*, S. İnan

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The early Silurian Qusaiba Shales are proven source rocks of the many Paleozoic petroleum systems of Saudi Arabia. In this study, a new, simple and cost-effective method for semi-quantitative analysis and graphical representation of palynological assemblage composition (PZC Phytoplankton–Zooplankton–Cryptospore ternary diagram) and a new visual thermal alteration index (IPA–TAI Integrated Palynomorph–Amorphous organic matter Thermal Alteration Index) integrating amorphous organic matter and palynomorph color, were developed based on the palynological/palynofacies analysis of some selected wells penetrating the early Silurian Qusaiba Shales throughout Saudi Arabia. The methods were tested against independent paleoenvironmental and thermal maturity indicators mainly based on geochemical parameters, confirming their validity as effective alternative methods for optical kerogen analysis and interpretation. The thermal maturity values estimated for core samples in the Qusaiba Shales from 13 wells in Saudi Arabia showed a strong correlation with Vitrinite Reflectance Equivalent (VRE%) maturity values determined from graptolite reflectance and pyrolysis Tmax measurements in the entire range of maturities (immature to overmature stages), proving that the present visual thermal alteration index can be successfully employed as a time efficient and reliable method for estimating thermal maturity in the Qusaiba Shales of Saudi Arabia. The present results show that the Qusaiba Shales were deposited in mostly mid- to outer shelf, and occasionally nearshore marine environments under prevailing dysoxic and anoxic water conditions, resulting in accumulation and preservation of organic matter.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)8-18
Number of pages11
JournalReview of Palaeobotany and Palynology
Volume270
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2019
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Elsevier B.V.

Funding

The authors gratefully acknowledge Saudi Aramco management for permission to study the core samples of the Qusaiba Shales and to publish the results. Said Al-Hajri, Manager of the Geological Operations Department of Saudi Aramco, is especially thanked for supporting this study. The authors are grateful to Nigel Hooker (Geological Solutions Division, Saudi Aramco) for his extremely helpful editorial comments. Special thanks are extended to Shaun Hayton (EXPEC-ARC, Saudi Aramco), Geoff Clayton (University of Sheffield), and Jan Hennissen (BGS, Keyworth) for their valuable discussions, reviews and constructive comments that improved the paper. This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.

FundersFunder number
EXPEC-ARC
Geological Operations Department of Saudi Aramco
Jan Hennissen
Shaun Hayton
Biogeoscience Institute, University of Calgary
University of Sheffield
Saudi Aramco

    Keywords

    • Arabian Plate
    • Early Silurian
    • Palynofacies
    • Palynomorphs
    • Qusaiba
    • Thermal maturity

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