Abstract

Nfayil Formation (Middle Miocene) is considered the equivalent of Fatha Formation; it is exposed in the western and southern Desert of Iraq with two members: a carbonate Lower Member that is composed of three cycles of limestone and marlstone intercalation and an Upper clastic Member of sandstone and claystone with thin layers of limestone. It extends from the western to the southern desert with a systematic succession of two or three cycles of lower members each one consisting of an interbedding of soft olive-green marl with medium tough shelly limestone rich with oyster shells. The upper member disappears in many localities due to erosion activity. From the field observation this succession was normally exposed in the southern Desert at the western parts of Al-Muthanna Governorate to the south of Dewaniyah Governorate, while in the eastern part of Al-Muthanna Governorate to the south of Al-Nasiriya Governorate, the beds showed a different lithology and fossil content. The olive-green marl turned to be rusty red with a higher content of fossils, the shelly limestone bed rich with oyster shells became red in colour, rusty and the oyster shells were substituted by pelecypods shells with the same concentration. A microfacies analysis study supported by chemical and X-ray analysis was carried out to predict the depositional environment and deposition circumstances in both sections. The thin section, chemical analysis and X-ray analysis were accomplished at the laboratories of the Iraq Geological Survey. Chemical analyses showed a high ratio of MgO oxide in Nasiriya section compare with Samawa section, that result was supported by X-ray analyses which refer to calcite mineral as the only mineral exists in Samawa beds wile in Nasiriya minerals of dolomite, quartz, feldspar and clay minerals were appeared.Environments extracted from thin section study showed more local fluctuations in sea level in Samawa section.

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