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  • Legacy product - no abstract available

  • New and existing Sm-Nd whole rock isotope data and U-Pb zircon ages from sedimentary rocks in several Australian Proterozoic Provinces hosting Zn-Pb mineralisation show a distinct transition that corresponds to a change from evolved sediment sources to more juvenile sedimentary sources at ~1650 Ma. This Sm-Nd isotopic change has been documented in the Eastern and Western Successions of the Mount Isa Inlier, the Etheridge Province of the Georgetown Inlier. A similar transition at ~1650 Ma has also been documented in the Broken Hill and Olary Domains of the Curnamona Province (Barovich and Hand 2008) and defines a continental-scale isotopic signal. The world-class, sediment-hosted Mt Isa and Hilton-George Fisher Zn-Pb Mt Isa-style deposits in the Western Mount Isa Inlier occur above the transition in sediments derived from more juvenile sources. In contrast, Pb-Zn-Ag Broken Hill-style deposits, including the Broken Hill (Curnamona), Cannington (Isa), Mount Misery (now Chloe) and Railway Flat deposits (Georgetown Inlier) (Carr et al. 2004) occur below this ~1650 Ma transition in sediments which have a much more evolved source.

  • Basins on the western margin of Australia are both well explored (e.g. North West Shelf) or under-explored frontier basins (e.g. Perth Basin). For many of these basins, knowledge of basement and crustal structure is limited. To provide new insight into these fundamental features of a continental margin, we present the results of process-oriented gravity modelling applied to basins both with (North West Shelf) and without (Perth Basin) constraints on crustal structure. Process-oriented gravity modelling is a method that considers the rifting, sedimentation and magmatic processes that led to the present-day gravity field. By back-stripping the sediment load under different assumptions of isostasy (i.e. range of flexural rigidities), rift-related crustal structure can be inferred. When the rift and sedimentation gravity anomalies are combined and compared to observed free-air gravity, insight into the presence of magmatic underplating, the location of the continent-ocean boundary and the thermal history of a margin can, amongst other factors, be gained. Initial modelling suggests that the Perth Basin maintained a relatively low flexural rigidity throughout its history (effective elastic thickness ~5 km), which may reflect the prevalence of transtensional deformation during Late Jurassic-Early Cretaceous break-up between Australia and Greater India. However, constraining elastic thickness in the Perth Basin is made difficult by uncertainties in resolving the total sediment thickness (particularly in outboard parts of the basin) and crustal structure. Such uncertainties are less of an issue for some North West Shelf basins where seismic refraction data enhance the interpretation of abundant seismic reflection data.

  • The frontier deepwater Otway and Sorell basins lie offshore of south-western Victoria and western Tasmania at the eastern end of Australia's Southern Rift System. The basins developed during rifting and continental separation between Australia and Antarctica from the Cretaceous to Cenozoic. The complex structural and depositional history of the basins reflects their location in the transition from an orthogonal-obliquely rifted continental margin (western-central Otway Basin) to a transform continental margin (southern Sorell Basin). Despite good 2D seismic data coverage, these basins remain relatively untested and their prospectivity poorly understood. The deepwater (>500 m) section of the Otway Basin has been tested by two wells, of which Somerset 1 recorded minor gas shows. Three wells have been drilled in the Sorell Basin, where minor oil shows were recorded near the base of Cape Sorell 1. As part of the Federal Government funded Offshore Energy Security Program, Geoscience Australia has acquired new aeromagnetic data and utilised open file seismic datasets to undertake an integrated regional study of the deepwater Otway and Sorell basins. Structural interpretation of the new aeromagnetic data and potential field modelling provide new insights into the basement architecture and tectonic history, and highlights the role of pre-existing structural fabric in controlling the evolution of the basins. Regional scale mapping of key sequence stratigraphic surfaces across the basins, integration of the regional structural analysis, and petroleum systems modelling have resulted in a clearer understanding of the tectonostratigraphic evolution and petroleum prospectivity of this complex basin system.

  • Summary of forward gravity and flexure modelling of the New Caledonia Trough to highlight temporal variations in lithospheric rigidity during its evolution.

  • The Early Permian to Middle Triassic Bowen and Gunnedah Basins and the Early Jurassic to Early Cretaceous Surat Basin exhibit a complex subsidence history over a period of about two hundred million years. Backstripped tectonic subsidence curves, constructed by removing the effects of processes such as sediment loading, loading due to the water column, and sediment compaction allow the subsidence histories of the basin to be examined in terms of the tectonic drivers that caused the subsidence of the basins. In the Early Permian, rapid subsidence was driven by mechanical extension, forming a series of half grabens along the western margin of the Bowen and Gunnedah Basins. Mechanical extension ceased at about 280 Ma, being replaced by a phase of passive thermal subsidence, resulting in more widespread, uniform sedimentation, with reduced tectonic subsidence rates. At the start of the Late Permian, the passive thermal subsidence phase was interrupted by the onset of lithospheric flexure during a foreland basin phase, driven by convergence and thrust loading to the east in the New England Orogen. Initially, dynamic loading, caused by viscous corner flow in the asthenospheric wedge above the west-dipping subducting plate, led to limited tectonic subsidence. Later in the Late Permian, the dynamic loading was overwhelmed by static loading, caused by the developing retroforeland thrust belt in New England, leading to very high rates of tectonic subsidence, and the development of a major retroforeland basin. Peneplanation in the Late Triassic was followed by sedimentation at the start of the Jurassic, forming the Surat Basin, where the tectonic subsidence can again be interpreted in terms of dynamically-induced platform tilting. Subduction ceased at about 95 Ma, resulting in rapid uplift, due the rebound of the lithosphere following cessation of subduction, or it stepping well to the outboard of Australia.

  • Many aspects of the evolution and overall architecture of the Australian southern rifted margin are consistent with current models for the development of non-volcanic rifted margins. However, when examined in detail, several key features of the southern margin provide useful points of comparison with the Atlantic and Alpine Tethyan margins from which these models derive. Extensive petroleum industry and government seismic and geophysical data sets have enabled detailed mapping of the basins of the southern margin and an improved understanding of its tectonostratigraphic evolution. Australia's southern rifted continental margin extends for over 4000 km, from the structurally complex margin south of the Naturaliste Plateau in the west, to the transform plate boundary adjacent to the South Tasman Rise in the east. The margin contains a series of Middle Jurassic to Cenozoic basins-the Bight, Otway, Sorell, Gippsland and Bass basins, and smaller depocentres on the South Tasman Rise (STR). These basins, and the architecture of the margin, evolved through repeated episodes of extension and thermal subsidence leading up to, and following, the commencement of sea-floor spreading between Australia and Antarctica. Break-up took place diachronously along the margin, commencing in the west at ~83 Ma and concluding in the east at ~ 34 Ma. In general, break-up was not accompanied by significant magmatism and the margin is classified as 'non-volcanic' (or magma-poor). Initial NW-SE ultra-slow to slow seafloor spreading (latest Santonian-Early Eocene), followed by N-S directed fast spreading (Middle Eocene-present), resulted in: (1) an E-W oriented obliquely- to normally-rifted marginal segment extending from the westernmost Bight Basin to the central Otway Basin; (2) an approximately N-S oriented transform continental margin in the east (western Tasmania-STR), and (3) a transitional zone between those end-members (southern Otway-Sorell basins).

  • Basin evolution of the Vlaming Sub-basin and the deep-water Mentelle Basin, both located offshore on the southwest Australian continental margin, were investigated using 2D and 3D petroleum system modelling. Compositional kinetics, determined on the main source sequences, were used to predict timing of hydrocarbon generation and migration as well as GOR evolution and phase behaviour in our 2D and 3D basin models. The main phase of petroleum generation in the Vlaming Sub-basin occurred at 150 Ma and ceased during following inversion and erosion episodes. Only areas which observed later burial have generated additional hydrocarbons during the Tertiary and up to present day. The modelling results indicate the likely generation and trapping of light oils for the Jurassic intervals for a variety of structural traps. It is these areas which are of greatest interest from an exploration point of view. The 2D numerical simulations in the Mentelle Basin indicate the presence of active hydrocarbon generating kitchen areas. Burial histories and generalized petroleum evolutionary histories are investigated.

  • Like many of the basins along Australia's eastern seaboard, there is currently only a limited understanding of the geothermal energy potential of the New South Wales extent of the Clarence-Moreton Basin. To date, no study has examined the existing geological information available to produce an estimate of subsurface temperatures throughout the region. Forward modelling of basin structure using its expected thermal properties is the process generally used in geothermal studies to estimate temperatures at depth in the Earth's crust. The process has seen increasing use in complex three-dimensional (3D) models, including in areas of sparse data. The overall uncertainties of 3D models, including the influence of the broad assumptions required to undertake them, are generally only poorly examined by their authors and sometimes completely ignored. New methods are presented in this study which will allow estimates and uncertainties to be addressed in a quantitative and justifiable way. Specifically, this study applies Monte Carlo Analysis to constrain uncertainties through random sampling of statistically congruent populations. Particular focus has been placed on the uncertainty in assigning thermal conductivity values to complex and spatially extensive geological formations using only limited data. As a case study these new methods are then applied to the New South Wales extent of the Clarence-Moreton Basin. The geological structure of the basin has been modelled using data from existing petroleum drill holes, surface mapping and information derived from previous studies. A range of possible lithological compositions was determined for each of the major geological layers through application of compositional data analysis. In turn, a range of possible thermal conductivity values was determined for the major lithology groups using rock samples held by the NSW Department of Primary Industries (DPI). These two populations of values were then randomly sampled to establish 120 different forward models, the results of which have been interpreted to present the best estimate of expected subsurface temperatures, and their uncertainties. These results suggest that the Clarence-Moreton Basin has a moderate geothermal energy potential within an economic drilling depth. This potential however, displays significant variability between different modelling runs, which is likely due to the limited data available for the region. While further work could improve these methods, it can be seen from this study that uncertainties can provide a means by which to add confidence to results, rather than undermine it.