petroleum potential
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The Early Cretaceous South Perth Shale has been previously identified as the regional seal in the offshore Vlaming Sub-basin. The South Perth Shale is a deltaic succession, which unfilled a large palaeotopographic low in the Early Cretaceous through a series of transgressive and regressive events. The new study undertaken at Geoscience Australia has shown that the seal quality varies greatly throughout the basin and at places has very poor sealing properties. A re-evaluation of the regional seal based on seismic mapping determined the extent of the pro-delta shale facies within the South Perth Shale succession, which are shown to provide effective sealing capacity. New sequence stratigraphic interpretation, seismic facies mapping, new and revised biostratigraphic data and well log analysis were used to produce palaeogeographic reconstructions which document the distribution of depositional facies within the South Perth Shale Formation and reveal evolution of the Early Cretaceous deltas. Our study documents spatial variations in the seal quality and re-defines the extent and thickness of the regional seal in the central Vlaming Sub-basin. It provides an explanation for the lack of exploration success at some structural closures and constraints for possible location of the valid plays.
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Full paper version of the short abstract (GEOCAT# 73702) previously submitted and accepted by conference organisers
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The 2012 Australian offshore acreage release includes exploration areas in four southern margin basins. Three large Release Areas in the frontier Ceduna Sub-basin lie adjacent to four exploration permits granted in 2011. The petroleum prospectivity of the Ceduna Sub-basin is controlled by the distribution of Upper Cretaceous marine and deltaic facies and a structural framework established by Cenomanian growth faulting. These Release Areas offer a range of plays charged by Cretaceous marine and coaly source rocks and Jurassic lacustrine sediments. In the westernmost part of the gas-producing Otway Basin, a large Release Area offers numerous opportunities to test existing and new play concepts in underexplored areas beyond the continental shelf. Gas and oil shows in the eastern part of the Release Area confirm the presence of at least two working petroleum systems. In the eastern Otway Basin, several Release Areas are offered in shallow water on the eastern flank of the highly prospective Shipwreck Trough and provide untested targets along the eastern basin margin southward into Tasmanian waters. To the south, a large Release Area in the frontier Sorell Basin provides the opportunity to explore a range of untested targets in depocentres that formed along the western Tasmanian transform continental margin. Two Release Areas offer exploration potential in the under-explored eastern deepwater part of the Gippsland Basin. Geological control is provided by several successful wells indicating the presence of both gas and liquids in the northern area, while the southern area represents the remaining frontier of the basin.
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Exploration for Unconventional Hydrocarbons in Australia reached a new milestone when Beach Energy announced the first successful flow test of a shale gas target in the Cooper Basin. Significant exploration activity is being seen in the Amadeus, Pedirka and Georgina basins and Beetaloo Sub-basin, while little is known of the potential of many other Central Australian basins. The globally acknowledged large resource potential of coal seam gas, shale and tight gas on the continent in addition to low sovereign risk has put Australia firmly on the radar of many local and international exploration companies. Over the next 12 months Geoscience Australia in collaboration with its counterparts in the State and Territory resource and energy departments will undertake an initial assessment of Australia's unconventional hydrocarbon resource potential. Capitalising on decades of high quality geological data held by the Commonwealth and the States and Territories, the programme aims to compile these data using nationally consistent assessment methodologies that ultimately provide robust figures in an internationally accepted standard. The immediate goal is to provide a first-pass, high level estimate of the likely resource volumes, which will be reported in the second edition of the Australian Energy Resource Assessment (published by RET). The longer term work program aims to assess Australia's onshore basins in terms of their resource potential and provide pre-competitive data to industry. To achieve this, several geological techniques will be applied including, but not limited to, geochemical screening, mapping of source rock occurrences and their distributions as well as physical rock property studies.
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Australia's southern continental margin hosts rich oil and gas resources and offers huge potential for future discoveries. Most of Australia's oil has been produced from the Gippsland Basin, located in the easternmost part of the southern rift system. With all the petroleum system elements and processes in place, the basin contains Australia's only billion barrel oil fields. These giant accumulations are sourced from rich liquid-prone coaly and carbonaceous source rocks. In contrast, the western two-thirds of the southern margin is occupied by one of the largest frontier provinces in Australia - the Bight Basin. The thick sedimentary succession in the Bight Basin (>15 km) and its evolution from local half-graben depocentres during the Jurassic, to an extensive sag basin in the Early Cretaceous and passive margin during the Late Cretaceous to Holocene, suggests that there is significant potential for the presence of multiple petroleum systems across the basin. The Ceduna Sub-basin in the eastern Bight Basin is currently the focus of renewed exploration efforts. The key to its petroleum prospectivity is the distribution of Upper Cretaceous marine and deltaic facies. Dredging of upper Cenomanian-Turonian organic-rich marine rocks has confirmed the presence of high quality potential source rocks in this section. These rocks are mature in the central part of the Ceduna Sub-basin and are likely to have generated and expelled hydrocarbons since the Campanian. Excellent reservoir rocks and potential intraformational seals are present in the Upper Cretaceous deltaic successions, and regional seals could be provided by Upper Cretaceous marine shales.
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Release Area W11-18 is a very large block over the offshore northern Perth Basin, covering parts of the Abrolhos, Houtman and Vlaming sub-basins and the Beagle and Turtle Dove ridges. Geoscience Australia (GA) has assessed the petroleum prospectivity of this area as part of the Australian Government's Offshore Energy Security Program. This assessment includes the first published synthesis of data from fourteen new field wildcat wells drilled in this part of the basin since the Cliff Head-1 discovery (2001), and the interpretation of new regional 2D seismic data acquired during GA survey 310 (2008-2009). A refined tectono-stratigraphic model for the offshore basin provides insights into basin evolution and prospectivity. Oil has been produced since 2006 from the Cliff Head oil field in WA-31-L, which is directly adjacent to Release Area W11-18. Three petroleum discoveries are included within the Release Area, with oil and gas in Dunsborough-1, and gas in Frankland-1 and Perseverance-1. These accumulations are reservoired in Permian sandstones and have primarily been sourced from the Hovea Member of the Kockatea Shale, which has also sourced the majority of producing oil and gas fields of the onshore Perth Basin. New seismic data show Permo-Triassic strata that are stratigraphic equivalents of the productive onshore and nearshore Perth Basin petroleum system, also occur within Permian half-graben in the outer Abrolhos and Houtman sub-basins. Source rock, oil stain and fluid inclusion sampling from this interval suggest that the proven onshore-nearshore petroleum system is also effective and widespread in the offshore. There is also evidence for an active Jurassic petroleum system within the Release Area. The Release Area offers a range of plays in a variety of water depths, predominantly less than 200 m, and is highly prospective for oil and gas.
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A geological investigation, directed mainly towards the assessment of oil potentialities of the Basin, was commenced in 1948 by the Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics when a small geological party carried out a reconnaissance of the Minilya River area. Since then up to seven geologists of the Bureau under the direction of M. A. Condon have been mapping the area in some detail each year in order to determine the stratigraphical sequence and its variations, regional structure, and the anticlinal structures and their extent. In addition to the regional mapping the two largest anticlines were mapped in detail. Geophysical work (gravity and seismic) has been carried out by the Geophysical section of the Bureau (see Record 1954/44). More recently, Seismograph Services Ltd. carried out a seismic survey for West Australian Petroleum Pty. Ltd. - mainly for the purpose of checking on the location of its first deep test, which is now being drilled on the Rough Range Anticline with some encouraging results to date. Palaeontological, petrographical and chemical examinations of specimens collected in the field are still continuing by specialists of the Bureau and outside.
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Oil and gas discoveries in Australia's offshore basins are concentrated on the North West Shelf (Northern Carnarvon, Browse and Bonaparte basins) and Bass Strait (Gippsland, Otway and Bass basins). While discoveries have been made in a few regions outside these areas (e.g. Perth Basin), a large proportion of Australia's offshore basins remain exploration frontiers. However, the decline in oil production from the North West Shelf and Bass Strait basins since 2000 has led to an increasing exploration interest in the frontier basins. In order to improve our knowledge of the offshore frontiers and encourage exploration to these areas, from 2003-2011, Geoscience Australia was funded by the Australian Government to undertake a series of pre-competitive data acquisition and analyses programs in frontier basins around the Australian margin. This Record presents a comprehensive inventory of the geology, petroleum systems, exploration status and data coverage for 35 frontier basins, sub-basins and provinces, that draws on the results of those pre-competitive data programs, as well as exploration results and the geoscience literature. The Record also provides an assessment of the critical science and exploration questions and issues for each area. The results of each basin assessment are summarised in a prospectivity ranking. The availability of data and level of knowledge in each area is reflected in a confidence rating for that ranking. While the prospectivity of some areas is widely acknowledged to be high (e.g. Ceduna Sub-basin), the perception of prospectivity in many basins is negatively affected by the amount or quality of data available; in these basins, the acquisition of new data or targeted research could make a significant difference to the understanding of petroleum potential and likelihood of success. Therefore, recommendations for future work that could assist in addressing key knowledge or data gaps are included in each basin assessment.
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Promotional flyer describing the GA programme in national unconventional hydrocarbon prospectivity and resource assessment commenced in 2011 by the Onshore (Unconventional) Hydrocarbons Section, Basin Resources Group, Energy Division.
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<p>This data package includes raw (Level 0) and reprocessed (Level 1) HyLogging data from 25 wells in the Georgina Basin, onshore Australia. This work was commissioned by Geoscience Australia, and includes an accompanying meta-data report that documents the data processing steps undertaken and a description of the various filters (scalars) used in the processed datasets. <p>Please note: Data can be made available on request to ClientServices@ga.gov.au