Study of oil and gas prospective structures of the Aral sea region with the forecast of their reserves

Authors

  • S.K. Kurbaniyazov Akhmet Yassawi International Kazakh-Turkish University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51301/vest.su.2021.i3.04

Keywords:

oil, gas, Priaralie, raw materials, seismic exploration, geochemistry, rocks.

Abstract

At the beginning of the Barremian time, the sea receded and until the beginning of the late Alb, the territory was a low-lying accumulative plain, within which the accumulation of alluvial and lacustrine-alluvial deposits occurred: red-brown clays, siltstones with layers of brown sandstones and sands and lenses of dark gray lignite. Gravelites and conglomerates are noted at the base of the strata.In the Rannemalba, there was a short-term transgression of the sea, but the territory of the modern Eastern Aral Sea region was not flooded and was a coastal-sea plain, where clays, siltstones and sandstones accumulated. By the end of the Late Alb, the sea regressed and the area again became a low-lying alluvial-lacustrine plain. There was an accumulation of variegated clays, greenish-gray siltstones, sands and sandstones, as well as coals throughout the territory. During the research work, the most promising types of hydrocarbon traps were justified by stratigraphic levels and the zoning of their distribution was revealed. The assessment of the prospects of the area for the identification of oil and gas deposits is given. Informative and qualitative signs (criteria) of oil and gas potential are identified. The areas and specific structures for setting up detailed search operations to identify oil and gas deposits are justified. The estimation of potential resources of hydrocarbon raw materials is calculated.

Published

2021-06-30

How to Cite

Курбаниязов, С. . (2021). Study of oil and gas prospective structures of the Aral sea region with the forecast of their reserves. Engineering Journal of Satbayev University, 143(3), 25–33. https://doi.org/10.51301/vest.su.2021.i3.04

Issue

Section

Earth Science