--> Polygonal Faults/Fractures Pattern within Abu Dhabi Onshore Lower Cretaceous Platform Carbonates
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AAPG Bulletin, Vol. 90 (2006), Program Abstracts (Digital)

7th Middle East Geosciences Conference and Exhibition
Manama, Bahrain
March 27-29, 2006

ABSTRACT: Polygonal Faults/Fractures Pattern within Abu Dhabi Onshore Lower Cretaceous Platform Carbonates

Marie-Odile Bockel-Rebelle1, Marc G. Vesseron1, Frederic Jeanjean2, Suaad Abdulla Khoori1, and Michel J.M. Rebelle1
1 ADCO, P.O. box 270, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, phone: 00 971 2604 3393, [email protected]
2 TOTAL, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

Recent improvements in Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitinterpretationNext Hit tools highlight a polygonal sub -Previous HitseismicNext Hit pattern in the whole geological section, Abu Dhabi onshore fields. Does this new image result from real geological event or/and Previous HitseismicNext Hit noise?

Persistence of this geometry, through different Previous HitseismicNext Hit acquisitions, processing methods and Previous HitinterpretationNext Hit tools suggests a geological origin.

Analyses of specific Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes suggest the following conclusions:

- The pattern is characterized by “honeycomb shape” geometries as compared with polygonal fault patterns observed within clastic sediments or chalk. Each body (3D polygonal cell) is made of facets at different scale. Such a pattern has never been observed before in platform carbonates.

- Their vertical distribution is linked to mechanical strata units. It is lithological and burial dependant, although the relationship is not yet defined.

- Horizontally, a relation between the expression of polygons and the topography of the studied sequence is observed. The polygonal pattern is enhanced in deformed areas; facets are less expressed within quiet areas. Focused analysis within main fault zones reveals that fault segments are made of previously identified polygonal facets.

Geological and Previous HitseismicNext Hit observation supports an early origin of the polygons. Later during the late Cretaceous deformation event, some polygons facets evolved from a random orientation away from the faults to a slight readjustment, eventually to the fault plane itself. Fault segments are likely to re-activate former polygonal facets; these facets being re-organized as straighter fault planes.

Locally, dynamic Previous HitdataTop support the polygonal faults/fractures pattern as being flow barriers and /or vertical conduits for flow.

 

Copyright © 2006. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All Rights Reserved.