--> Multidisciplinary Biofacies Analysis of the Khafji and Safaniya Members of the Wasia Formation (Cretaceous) of Saudi Arabia
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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: Multidisciplinary Biofacies Analysis of the Khafji and Safaniya Members of the Wasia Formation (Cretaceous) of Saudi Arabia

Geraint W. Hughes1, Merrell A. Miller2, James B. Riding3, and Osman Varol4
1 Saudi Aramco, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, phone: 96638747892, [email protected]
2 Geological Technical Services, Saudi Aramco, P.O. Box 12311, Dhahran, 31311, Saudi Arabia
3 British Geological Survey, Keyworth, United Kingdom
4 Varol Research, Colwyn Bay, United Kingdom

Conventional biostratigraphy based on palynology and nannofossils provides broadly spaced datums for age control within the Aptian – Albian deltaic sequences represented by the Khafji and Safaniya members of the Wasia Formation. Higher resolution stratigraphy is achieved by using multidisciplinary biofacies that contribute to recognition of higher order marine flooding events, associated with within the world's largest offshore oilfield reservoirs of Saudi Arabia. Integration with sedimentology is an ongoing part of this project.

The intervals between biostratigraphic datums based on the appearances of elaterate palynomorphs (late Albian), pollen, dinoflagellate cysts and selected nannofossil control (late Albian and Aptian) are characterized by diversity/abundance peaks of dinoflagellate cysts, fresh water algae, foraminifera, coccolith and ascidian spicule nannofossils. Previous HitBenthicTop agglutinating foraminifera define the upper and lower estuarine and marine settings. This control has been developed from Recent assemblages from the Sedili River, Malaysia where foram assemblages were calibrated to ebb and flood salinities from the South China Sea to 32 km upstream.These Recent assemblages form the basis for understanding paleoecology of Trochammina, Ammobaculites and Orbitolina biofacies of the Khafji and Safaniya members. Dinocysts also show similar patterns to the foraminifera responding to salinity, of which Subtilisphaera dominates brackish environments with assemblages diversifying with increasing salinity. Pteridophyte spores dominate the terrestrial successions. The integrated biofacies display isolated but distinct evidence of marine flooding events of variable extent within a depositionally complex thick succession Khafji and Safaniya deltaic sediments.

 

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