Maher Ahmed, Bek Jiří
Department of Geology, Faculty of Science, Al-Azhar University, Assiut 71524, Egypt.
Laboratory of Palaeobiology and Palaeoecology, Institute of Geology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Rozvojová 269, 165 00 Prague, Czech Republic.
Life (Basel). 2025 May 28;15(6):872. doi: 10.3390/life15060872.
The Nubia Sandstone in the Gulf of Suez, Egypt, is a well-known unclassified sediment. Palynology is considered the most effective tool for dealing with this problem. Miospore assemblages from the Lowermost Carboniferous (Tournaisian) have been discovered from the J62-86 and the J62-64 AST1 wells located in the July Field of the Gulf of Suez, Egypt. Spores are moderately to poorly preserved, suggesting a stratigraphical position within Lowermost Carboniferous ages. The studied sediments include poorly preserved conodont fragments and present significant identification challenges due to the drilling methodologies' complexities. Spore assemblage consists of 31 genera with 56 species. The dominant spores include zonate genera , , and camerate genera , , apiculate genera , and laevigate trilete genus and megaspores of the type are recorded. Marine microphytoplankton including , , , and some filamentous green algae of unknown affinity are recorded. The dispersed spore assemblage is associated with carbonized plant fragments. The palynological data have effectively dated the lower intervals of the Nubia Sandstone from the Nubia "B," indicating a Lowermost Carboniferous (Tournaisian) age, i.e., palynozone (VI). The stratigraphic differentiation of the Nubia Sandstone is crucial for subsequent correlating subsurface wells in the Gulf of Suez within the context of geology and hydrocarbon exploration, particularly given the scarcity of other fossil groups.