4.6 Article

Circular geological structures outcropping in the sedimentary basins of Saudi Arabia

Journal

JOURNAL OF ASIAN EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 106, Issue -, Pages 95-118

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jseaes.2015.02.031

Keywords

Saudi Arabia; Impact structure; Dissolution; Reflection seismic

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A number of circular geological structures outcrop in the sedimentary basins of Saudi Arabia, several are reviewed here to assess their mode of origin. They are unrelated to each other, are easily seen on aerial imagery, and their origins are assessed here on the basis of new fieldwork and reflection seismic data. The structures range in size from hundreds of meters to several kilometers in diameter. Jabal Rayah (28 degrees 39'N, 37 degrees 11'30 '' E) is 5 km in diameter with ring faults and anomalously steep dips in Siluro-Devonian strata. Reflection seismic data demonstrate that underlying strata are structureless and Jabal Rayah is interpreted as a probable impact structure. Ash Shutbah (21 degrees 37'08N, 45 degrees 39'21 '' E) is 2.3 km in diameter and consists of a zone of concentric sub-horizontal folds in Mesozoic carbonates, surrounding a central area of disharmonic, steeply plunging folds and a mass of stratigraphically-anomalous sandstone. There are dissolution structures in the vicinity and although this is a viable explanation, the uniquely large and complex nature of Ash Shutbah suggests an alternative origin by impact. Reflection seismic data show that underlying strata in the vicinity of Ash Shutbah are structureless. A province of at least 100 circular structures occurs in northeast Saudi Arabia. Aerial imagery and reflection seismic data shows that these structures are a mixture of bioherms and dissolution collapse features. The Kidan crater (22 degrees 06'53 '' N, 53 degrees 26'38 '' E) is a subcircular feature approximately 100 m in diameter, exposed in Quaternary sabkha between large sand dunes in the Rub' Al-Khali. Field investigation reveals an unfaulted bowl with a slightly fractured floor in sabkha facies. 3D reflection seismic data shows a small fault underlying the crater, leading to a fluid escape interpretation for the depression. (C) 2015 The Author. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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