4.7 Article

Sedimentary architecture of a Middle Ordovician embayment in the Murzuq Basin (Libya)

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 135, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2021.105339

Keywords

Gondwana; Middle Ordovician; Nonactualism; Basin architecture; Shallow marine; Marginal marine

Funding

  1. project 3D-MODGHASY [RTI 2018-097312-A-I00]
  2. Generalitat de Catalunya [2017SGR596]

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The Hawaz Formation is a siliciclastic succession deposited on the cratonic margin of Gondwana during the Middle Ordovician, and is one of the major oil-bearing reservoirs in the Murzuq Basin. Late Ordovician erosion has altered the original sedimentary architecture of the formation, requiring detailed correlation and sedimentary reconstruction for subsurface management. The formation is believed to have been deposited in a relatively protected embayed shoreline environment with unique sedimentary characteristics.
The Hawaz Formation comprises a siliciclastic, shallow to transitional marginal marine succession, deposited on the north-western cratonic margin of Gondwana during the Middle Ordovician. This unit is well documented in the north central part of the Murzuq Basin, where it is often dramatically truncated by Late Ordovician glaciation unconformities, generating a major discontinuity, not only in the studied area but also across the whole Saharan Platform of North Africa. The Hawaz Formation is particularly relevant as one of the two major oil-bearing reservoirs in the Murzuq Basin. However, Late Ordovician erosion ensures that its present configuration bears very little relation to the original sedimentary architecture and, consequently, there is a need for a detailed largescale correlation and sedimentary reconstruction of the Hawaz in order to improve subsurface management of this reservoir unit. The present study was developed from a previous sedimentological characterization of the Hawaz Formation, based on subsurface data provided by 35 wells. This sedimentological background provided the basis for the reconstruction of the sedimentary architecture of this unit by means of eight correlation panels oriented along both sedimentological dip (NNW-SSE) and strike (WSW to ENE). In addition, a series of Gross Depositional Environment (GDE) maps were also generated with the aim of providing insight into the lateral distribution of facies belts within the framework of a sequence stratigraphic-based reservoir zonation. The results of this study suggest that the Hawaz Formation was deposited in a relatively protected or embayed shoreline with multiple bays/estuaries as the main entry points for sediment into the basin, most likely influenced by the effects of pre-existing north-northwest to south-southeast Pan-African structures controlling local accommodation space and reactivated during Ordovician times. Correlation panels and GDE maps also show the Hawaz Formation to be an extensive and continuous reservoir across the studied area, deposited in a broadly extensive subtidal to intertidal paralic environment, with very few or possibly no modern sedimentary analogues.

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