“…Due to their economic interest, these carbonate platforms and intrashelf basin successions have been studied from palaeogeographic and sequence stratigraphy points of view (Al‐Mojel et al, 2018; Hughes, 2004; Sadooni, 1997; Sharland et al, 2001; Ziegler, 2001). However, some intrashelf basins, such as the Sargelu or Gotnia Basin (present Kurdistan Region of northern Iraq) and Hawraman Basin (Hawraman region in NW Iran; Figure 1a), have received less attention, and most studies, specifically in Kurdistan, have been limited to facies analysis and source rock studies (e.g., Kirkuk and Hamrin oilfields; Abdula, 2015, 2017; Abdula, Balaky, Nurmohamadi, & Piroui, 2015; Abdula et al, 2020; Balaky, 2004; Hakimi, Najaf, Abdula, & Mohialdeen, 2018; Jassim & Buday, 2006; Salae, 2001). Predominant carbonates and shales were deposited during the Middle and Late Jurassic in these intrashelf basins (i.e., Sargelu, Najmah, and Gotnia formations in Hawraman Basin in NW Iran; Sargelu, Naokelekan, and Barsarin formations in Sargelu [Gotnia] Basin in the Kurdistan region of Iraq; Figure 1b).…”