Authors / CoAuthors
Edwards, D.S. | Boreham, C.J. | Hope, J.M. | Buckler, T.
Abstract
This study documents the natural gas compositions of accumulations on the Exmouth Plateau and adjacent Rankin Platform in the Carnarvon Basin, a proven super-giant gas province on the North West Shelf of offshore Western Australia. The Exmouth Plateau contains Australia's largest undeveloped gas resources. The primary reservoirs are the Middle Late Triassic Mungaroo Formation (Chrysaor, Dionysus, Geryon, Maenad, Orthrus and Urania discoveries), the Late Jurassic sands of the Dingo Claystone at Geryon and Io/Jansz, and the Early Cretaceous Barrow Group at Scarborough. The gas accumulations at Geryon, Io/Jansz, Maenad, Orthrus and Urania are dry, with condensate to gas ratios (CGRs) of about 3 bbls/MMscf, although they contain low proportions of wet gases (average 100*(C1/ C1-C5) = 93.4 %). These gases typically have low concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2 <2.6 %). The gas at Scarborough is extremely dry (100*(C1/C1-C5) = 99.9 %), with low concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2 = 0.4 %). The d13C isotopic value of methane is -42.3, signifying the bacterial alteration of a thermogenic gas (Boreham et al., 2001). Wet gas is produced from the Mungaroo Formation on the northern Rankin Platform, with some of the wettest gases occurring at Goodwyn (CGR = 143 bbls/MMscf) and Echo/Yodel (CGR = 235 bbls/MMscf). The Mungaroo reservoired gas is drier (CGR ~12 bbls/MMscf) in Gorgon, located on the southern Rankin Platform. The Gorgon and neighbouring West Tryal Rocks, Chrysaor and Dionysus accumulations have elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) contents with the concentration and isotopic enrichment of CO2 increasing from the shallower (CO2 = 8 %; d13C CO2 = -5) to the deeper (CO2 = 23 %; d13C CO2 = -3) reservoirs. The isotopically enriched CO2 may originate from either a magmatic source or from the thermal decomposition of limestones within the deeply buried Permian, Triassic and Early Jurassic sediments. Mixing of inorganic and organic CO2 could explain the concentration isotopic trend observed in these accumulations. Gas: gas correlations based on the carbon (d13C) and hydrogen (dD) isotopic compositions of individual hydrocarbons from methane to n-pentane (C1-C5) are shown in Figure 1. The Geryon 1, Jansz 1, Maenad 1A, Orthrus 1 and Urania 1 gases have similarly shaped d13C isotopic profiles that show little differentiation between ethane, propane and butane (Figure 1a). Such a flat isotopic profile is typical of a terrigenous gas source (James, 1990) and may indicate either different sources for the wet gases and methane or facies changes within the same source rock. The most likely primary source of the Exmouth Plateau hydrocarbon gases is the regressive fluvial deltaic Triassic Mungaroo Formation. The isotopic profiles of the Gorgon 3 and North Gorgon 6 (southern Rankin Platform) and Chrysaor 1 gases display an almost linear d13C n-alkane profile (Figure 1c) and imply a different source province from that of the other Exmouth Plateau gases, most probably from Triassic Jurassic sediments in the Barrow Sub-basin, as well as within the Rankin Platform. The carbon and hydrogen isotopic profiles of the Dionysus gas are most similar to the other Exmouth Plateau gases (Figure 1b, d); however, its high concentration of isotopically enriched CO2 is most similar to the gases from the Gorgon area, suggesting the mixing of multiple sources of gas from different depocentres into this accumulation.
Product Type
nonGeographicDataset
eCat Id
65070
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Cnr Jerrabomberra Ave and Hindmarsh Dr GPO Box 378
Canberra
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Keywords
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- GA PublicationPoster/Image
- ( Theme )
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- natural gas
- ( Theme )
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- organic geochemistry
- ( Theme )
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- petroleum exploration
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- AU-WA
- Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC)
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- Earth Sciences
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- Published_External
Publication Date
2007-01-01T00:00:00
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geoscientificInformation
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[-21.0, -19.0, 113.0, 115.0]
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