Let’s look at some recent studies and papers describing basins across the continent of Australia.
Cooper Basin
An article in Gondwana Research describes the anatomy of the Cooper Basin using 2D seismic images, 1D stratigraphic backstripping, and paleogeographic mapping.
Geology of the basin: The Cooper Basin in eastern Australia is an intracratonic basin developed on the Gondwana supercontinent from the Late Pennsylvanian to Middle Triassic at a paleo-latitude of 50 degrees South.
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The basin sediments are entirely terrestrial with facies changes from Late Pennsylvanian glacial deposits to Early Triassic warm, dry, red beds.
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The researchers interpret this basin as a failed rift during the Late Paleozoic breakup of eastern Gondwana.
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The basin was superimposed on Cambro-Devonian rocks.
Oil and gas potential:
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Permian shales (Toolachee, Daralingie, Roseneath, Epsilon, Murteree, Patchawarra formations) have great source rock potential. These formations also contain coal beds up to 30 meters thick.
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More than 4,800 wells have been drilled in the basin.
Sydney Basin
A study published in De Gruyter Brill’s Open Geosciences reports new geochemical data on source rocks from the Late Permian to Early Triassic sediments of the Sydney Basin.
Geology of the basin:
Study design: Researchers collected fifteen core samples from six wells at depths of 493–796 meters for pyrolysis and GC-MS biomarker analyses.
Key findings:
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Samples yielded vitrinite reflectance values of 0.81–3.34 percent and Tmax values of 402–480 degrees Celsius.
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Total organic carbon values ranged from 4.5 to 20 percent, with higher values coming from coaly samples.
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Hydrogen index values ranged from 16 to 816.
Why it matters: Researchers suggest the deeper parts of the Sydney Basin may hold oil or gas reserves in Permian or Triassic sandstones.
Browse Basin
An AAPG Bulletin article describes the Cretaceous sequence stratigraphy and gross depositional environments of the Browse Basin within the North West Shelf of Australia.
About the basin: The Browse Basin is home to the producing Ichthys-Prelude gas field.
Study design: Researchers analyzed 2D seismic images and data from 31 wells.
Key findings:
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First-order sediment space accommodation by thermal and tectonic-eustatic causes were controlled by the plate tectonics of the Australia-India breakup.
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Third-order Cretaceous depositional sequences had three supersequences:
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Platform (sandstone and mudstone)
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Slope and basin-floor (siliciclastic claystone and carbonates with total organic carbon values of 1–2 percent)
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Submarine fan (sandstone bodied interbedded with mudstone, marls, and micrite)
Otway Basin
A study in JGR Solid Earth offers an innovative approach to image deep structures in the Otway Basin.
Geology of the basin: The Otway Basin in southeast Australia records the Cretaceous to Eocene breakup of Australia from Antarctica. The Precambrian-Paleozoic basement is buried under the Cretaceous-Miocene passive margin sediments.
Study design: Researchers used 2D interpreted seismic images, gravity, and magnetic anomaly data, and applied Euler deconvolution and machine learning methods to map deep structures.
Key findings:
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They identified four major faults, two of which segmented the Cretaceous syn-rift Otway Basin.
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These faults indicate inherited heterogeneity within the basement.