Abstract

ABSTRACT The regularly spaced, N-trending Summan Platform, Khurais-Burgan Anticline, En Nala (Ghawar) Anticline and Qatar Arch in the eastern part of the Arabian Plate appear to have formed during the Precambrian Amar Collision between about 640 and 620 million years ago. This collision occurred along the N-trending Amar Suture (that bisects the Arabian Peninsula at about longitude 45 E) when the Rayn micro-plate in the east was fused to the western part of the Arabian Craton. The great anticlines are bounded by the NE-trending Wadi Batin Fault and NW-trending Abu Jifan Fault that converge on the Amar Suture. Deep wells drilled into these anticlines intersected deformed metasediments that are dated as syn-collisional. The Amar Collision was followed by a widespread extensional collapse of the Arabian-Nubian Shield between about 620 and 530 million years ago. During the final extensional stage, between about 570 and 530 million years ago, the NW-trending Najd Fault System dislocated the Arabian Shield left-laterally by about 250 to 300 kilometers. This dislocation appears to complement NE-oriented intra-continental rifts in Oman, Pakistan, Zagros Mountains and the Arabian Gulf. In these rift basins there accumulated thick sequences of clastic and carbonate rocks and salt, such as the Ara Group in Oman, Salt Range Formation in Pakistan, and Hormuz Series in the Arabian Gulf and Zagros Mountains. During the extensional collapse, the N-trending anticlines probably remained elevated as elongated horsts bounded by normal faults. The intervening subsiding grabens accumulated syn-rift sediments including the Hormuz Salt, and form an inter-fingering pattern between the great N-trending anticlines. The Precambrian anticlines, together with the syn-rift salt form the foundations of most of the hydrocarbon traps in the Arabian Plate.

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