Abstract

The Upper Campanian Hartha Formation represents potential Cretaceous hydrocarbon-bearing reservoir rocks across the Y and J oilfields northwestern Zagros Basin, northern Iraq. The study objective is depositional environment which affects reservoir properties by tool, lithofacies, core, thin section, and logs, using petrel (V.2016) and strat software, facies distribution, grains, and diagenetic processes control and enhance reservoir properties which can plan platform production and minimize risks in choosing production wells location at two fields scale The current study is concerned with lithofacies and microfacies of the Hartha Formation within two fields in northern Iraq. Several subsurface well-log data, core, and cutting samples have been used in order to prepare thin sections that were subjected to sedimentological (lithofacies, and grain-size) examination. The petrography investigation revealed five rock-units including Hr. 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, the thickness of 89 m in the Y-A field and increasing to up to 140 m in the J-B field might be due to erosion or tectonic uplift of the topography in Y subbasin. Which is locally sub-basin within study fields western banks of Tigris river as gentle slope ramp depositional condition with Spectrum microfacies from lime-mudstone to packstone texture with rudest and benthic debris enhances by diagenesis, dolomitization, dissolution moldic porosity, fracture; dolostone is more effective in the upper section of the formation in A than B Wells. Many factors, such as cementation, compaction, and pore-filling autogenic minerals, decrease reservoir quality, and their effects are similar in wells A and B.

Highlights

  • The two fields were discovered at the beginning of the last century by the German team conducting a surface survey during the detection of the Middle Miocene Fatha Formation (Lower Fars) and the presence of oil seepage on the surface (Nobel and Evans, 1919)

  • The study objective is depositional environment which affects reservoir properties by tool, lithofacies, core, thin section, and logs, using petrel (V.2016) and strat software, facies distribution, grains, and diagenetic processes control and enhance reservoir properties which can plan platform production and minimize risks in choosing production wells location at two fields scale The current study is concerned with lithofacies and microfacies of the Hartha Formation within two fields in northern Iraq

  • Several subsurface well-log data, core, and cutting samples have been used in order to prepare thin sections that were subjected to sedimentological examination

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Summary

Introduction

The two fields were discovered at the beginning of the last century by the German team conducting a surface survey during the detection of the Middle Miocene Fatha Formation (Lower Fars) and the presence of oil seepage on the surface (Nobel and Evans, 1919). The Upper Campanian Hartha Formation has not produced hydrocarbons within the study area till the present day, while Tertiary reservoir rocks produced hydrocarbons only in the Y field. The Cretaceous Hartha Formation represents the main reservoirs across the Aqra sub-basin, which is part of the NW-SE trending major. The Hartha Formation is unconformably overlain by the Shiranish Formation, with glauconite grains and high gamma-ray readings as depositional conditions change from shoal to basinal facies. The facies and petrographic evaluation of Hartha Formation within Y and J fields in this study are aimed to determine the depositional and diagenetic features evaluation of carbonate facies and their impact on the reservoir quality of this formation, horizontal and vertical stratigraphic correlation construction, in the A and B wells

Materials and Methods
Facies and Depositional Model
Depositional Model
Digenesis Processes
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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