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  • AusAEM 02 Airborne Electromagnetic Survey, NT /WA, 2019-2020: TEMPEST® AEM data and conductivity estimates The accompanying data package, titled “AusAEM 02 WA/NT, 2019-20 Airborne Electromagnetic Survey: TEMPEST® airborne electromagnetic data and conductivity estimates”, was released on 10 August 2020 by Geoscience Australia (GA), the Geological Survey of Western Australia and the Northern Territory Geological Survey. The package contains processed data from the“AusAEM 02 WA/NT, 2019-20 Airborne Electromagnetic Survey" that was flown over the North-West part of the Northern Territory across the border and all the way to the coast into Western Australia. The regional survey was flown at a 20-kilometre nominal line spacing and entailed approximately 55,675 line kilometres of geophysical data. The survey was flown in two tranches during 2019, by CGG Aviation (Australia) Pty. Ltd. under contract to Geoscience Australia, using the TEMPEST® airborne electromagnetic system. CGG also processed the data. The survey also includes a further 6,450 line kilometres of infill flying that was funded by private exploration companies, acquired in certain blocks within the survey area. The data from these infill blocks have been processed in the same manner as the regional lines and are part of this release. Geoscience Australia commissioned the AusAEM 02 survey as part of the Exploring for the Future (EFTF) program, flown over parts of the Northern Territory and Western Australia. Geoscience Australia (GA) leads the EFTF program, in collaboration with the State and Territory Geological Surveys of Australia. The program is designed to investigate the potential mineral, energy and groundwater resources of Australia driving the next generation of resource discoveries. GA managed the survey data acquisition, processing, contract, the quality control of the survey and generating two of the three inversion products included in the data package. The data release package comntains 1. A data release package summary PDF document. 2. The survey logistics and processing report and TEMPEST® system specification files 3. ESRI shape files for the regional and infill flight lines 4. Final processed point located line data in ASEG-GDF2 format 5. Conductivity estimates generated by CGG’s EMFlow conductivty-depth transform -point located line data output from the inversion in ASEG-GDF2 format -graphical (PDF) multiplot conductivity sections and profiles for each flight line -Grids generated from CGG's inversion conductivty-depth transform in ER Mapper® format (layer conductivities) 6. Conductivity estimates generated by Geoscience Australia's inversion -point located line data output from the inversion in ASEG-GDF2 format -graphical (PDF) multiplot conductivity sections and profiles for each flight line -georeferenced (PNG) conductivity sections (suitable for pseudo-3D display in a 2D GIS) -GoCAD™ S-Grid 3D objects (suitable for various 3D packages)

  • <div>This dataset represents the second version of a compilation of borehole stratigraphic unit data on a national scale (Figure 1). It builds on the previous Australian Borehole Stratigraphic Units Compilation (ABSUC) Version 1.0 (Vizy &amp; Rollet, 2023a) with additional new or updated stratigraphic interpretation on key boreholes located in Figure 2. Its purpose is to consolidate and standardise publicly accessible information from boreholes, including those related to petroleum, stratigraphy, minerals, and water. This compilation encompasses data from states and territories, as well as less readily available borehole logs and interpretations of stratigraphy.</div><div>&nbsp;</div><div>This study was conducted as part of the National Groundwater Systems (NGS) Project within the Australian Government's Exploring for the Future (EFTF) program. Geoscience Australia’s Exploring for the Future program provides precompetitive information to inform decision-making by government, community and industry on the sustainable development of Australia's mineral, energy and groundwater resources. By gathering, analysing and interpreting new and existing precompetitive geoscience data and knowledge, we are building a national picture of Australia’s geology and resource potential. This leads to a strong economy, resilient society and sustainable environment for the benefit of all Australians. This includes supporting Australia’s transition to net zero emissions, strong, sustainable resources and agriculture sectors, and economic opportunities and social benefits for Australia’s regional and remote communities. The Exploring for the Future program, which commenced in 2016, is an eight year, $225m investment by the Australian Government. More information is available at http://www.ga.gov.au/eftf and https://www.eftf.ga.gov.au/national-groundwater-systems.</div><div>&nbsp;</div><div>As our understanding of Australian groundwater systems expands across states and territories, including legacy data from the 1970s and recent studies, it becomes evident that there is significant geological complexity and spatial variability in stratigraphic and hydrostratigraphic units nationwide. Recognising this complexity, there is a need to standardise diverse datasets, including borehole location and elevation, as well as variations in depth and nomenclature of stratigraphic picks. This standardisation aims to create a consistent, continent-wide stratigraphic framework for better understanding groundwater system for effective long-term water resource management and integrated resource assessments.</div><div>&nbsp;</div><div>This continental-scale compilation consolidates borehole data from 53 sources, refining 1,117,693 formation picks to 1,010,483 unique records from 171,396 boreholes across Australia. It provides a consistent framework for interpreting various datasets, enhancing 3D aquifer geometry and connectivity. Each data source's reliability is weighted, prioritising the most confident interpretations. Geological units conform to the Australian Stratigraphic Units Database (ASUD) for efficient updates. Regular updates are necessary to accommodate evolving information. Borehole surveys and dip measurements are excluded. As a result, stratigraphic picks are not adjusted for deviation, potentially impacting true vertical depth in deviated boreholes.</div><div>&nbsp;</div><div>This dataset provides:</div><div>ABSUC_v2&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Australian stratigraphic unit compilation dataset (ABSUC)</div><div>ABSUC_v2_TOP&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A subset of preferred top picks from the ABSUC_v2 dataset</div><div>ABSUC_v2_BASE&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A subset of preferred base picks from the ABSUC_v2 dataset</div><div>ABSUC_BOREHOLE_v2&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ABSUC Borehole collar dataset</div><div>ASUD_2023&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A subset of the Australia Stratigraphic Units Database (ASUD)</div><div>&nbsp;</div><div>Utilising this uniform compilation of stratigraphic units, enhancements have been made to the geological and hydrogeological surfaces of the Great Artesian Basin, Lake Eyre Basin and Centralian Superbasin. This compilation is instrumental in mapping various regional groundwater systems and other resources throughout the continent. Furthermore, it offers a standardised approach to mapping regional geology, providing a consistent foundation for comprehensive resource impact assessments.</div>

  • <p>Geoscience Australia (GA) generated a series of gravity and magnetic grids and enhancements covering Northern Australia. Several derivative gravity datasets have been generated 1) for the North-West Shield Western Australia region (approximately between latitudes 7‒26⁰ S and longitudes 110‒130⁰ E), 2) for the Northern Territory (approximately between latitudes 7‒26⁰ S and longitudes 125.5‒141⁰ E) and for Queensland (approximately between latitudes 7‒30⁰ S and longitudes 135‒160⁰ E). The magnetic dataset has been generated only for the North-West Shield Western Australia region (approximately between latitudes 7‒26⁰ S and longitudes 110‒130⁰ E). The magnetic and gravity data were downloaded from the Geophysical Archive Data Delivery System (GADDS), website (http://www.geoscience.gov.au/cgi-bin/mapserv?map=/nas/web/ops/prod/apps/mapserver/gadds/wms_map/gadds.map&mode=browse). Satellite Free-air (FA) gravity v27.1 (released March 11, 2019) and Satellite Topography v19.1 (released January 14, 2019) data were sourced from Sandwell et al. (2014) and downloaded from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), U.S. Navy and National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) (SIO Satellite Geodesy, website, http://topex.ucsd.edu/WWW_html/mar_grav.html). The Satellite Bouguer gravity grid with onshore correction density of 2.67 gcm-3 and offshore correction density of 2.20 gcm-3 was derived from the Free-air gravity v27.1 and Topography data V19.1. This Bouguer gravity grid was used for filling areas of data gaps in the offshore region. <p>Data evaluation and processing of gravity and magnetic data available in the area of interest resulted in the production of stitched onshore-offshore Bouguer gravity grid derived from offshore satellite Bouguer gravity grid and GA’s onshore ground and airborne gravity survey data and a stitched Total Magnetic Intensity (TMI) grid derived from airborne and shipborne surveys (Tables 1 and 5). A Reduction to the Pole (RTP) grid was derived from the stitched TMI grid. The TMI, RTP, FA and terrain corrected Bouguer gravity anomalies are standard datasets for geological analysis. The free-air gravity anomaly provides the raw and basic gravity information. Images of free-air gravity are useful for first-pass interpretation and the data is used for gravity modelling. Magnetic anomalies provide information on numerous magnetic sources, including deep sources as arising from the structure and composition of magnetic basement and shallow sources such as intra-sedimentary magnetic units (e.g. volcanics, intrusions, and magnetic sedimentary layers). A standard TMI image will contain information from all these sources. Geosoft Oasis montaj software was used throughout the data processing and enhancement procedure and the montaj GridKnit module was used to generate the stitched gravity and magnetic grids. <p>Enhancement techniques have been applied to the final processed Bouguer gravity and RTP magnetic grids to highlight subtle features from various sources and to separate anomalies from different source depths. These enhancement techniques are described in the next section. <p>Enhancement processing techniques and results <p>A summary of image processing techniques used to achieve various outcomes is described in Table 1. <p>Data type Filter applied Enhancement/outcome <p>Gravity/Magnetic First vertical derivative (1VD) Near surface features (e.g. intrabasinal) <p>Gravity/Magnetic Upward continuation Noise reduction in data <p>Gravity/Magnetic Low pass filter, or large distance upward continuation Enhancement of deep features (e.g. basement) <p>Gravity/Magnetic High pass filter Enhancement of shallow features (e.g. surface anomalies) <p>Gravity/Magnetic Tilt filter and 1VD Enhancement of structure (e.g. in basement) <p>Gravity/Magnetic ZS-Edgezone and ZS-Edge filters Enhancement of edges <p>Gravity/Magnetic horizontal modulus / horizontal gradient Enhancement of boundaries <p>Magnetic RTP (reduction to the pole), Compound Anomaly, and Analytic Signal filter Accurate location of sources

  • <div>Archean greenstone belts are a vital window into the tectonostratigraphic processes that operated in the early Earth and the geodynamics that drove them. However, the majority of greenstone belts worldwide are highly-deformed, complicating geodynamic interpretations. The volcano-sedimentary sequence of the 2775-2690 Ma Fortescue Group is different in that it is largely undeformed, offering a unique insight into the architecture of greenstone sequences. In the Fortescue magmatic rocks, geochemical signatures that in deformed belts in the Superior or Yilgarn Cratons might have been interpreted as arc-like, are explained by contamination of rift-related mantle and plume-derived magmas with Pilbara basement crust; understanding the wider geological and structural setting allows a more complete interpretation.</div><div> However, contamination of Fortescue magmas by an enriched sub-continental mantle lithosphere (SCLM) is an alternative hypothesis to the crustal contamination model. If demonstrated, the addition of sediments and fluids to the SCLM, required to form enriched/metasomaytised SCLM, would suggest active subduction prior to the Neoarchean. To test this hypothesis, we collected Hf-O isotopic data on zircons from felsic volcanic rocks throughout the Fortescue Group; if the contamination had a subducted sedimentary component (δ18O>20‰), then the O-isotopes should record a heavy signature.</div><div> The results show that the ca. 2775 Ma Mt Roe Formation has εHfi from 0 to -5.6, and δ18OVSMOW of +4.8- +0.3‰, with the majority of values <+3‰. The ca. 2765 Ma Hardey Formation (mostly sediments) has highly unradiogenic εHfi of -5 to -9.4, and δ18O of +7.8- +6.6‰. The ca. 2730 Ma Boongal Formation displays similar values as for Mt Roe, with εHfi +1.9 to -5.5 and δ18O +3.0 to -0.6‰. The ca. 2720 Ma Tumbiana Formation shows the greatest range in εHfi from +4.9 to -4.6, with δ18O +7.1- +0.7‰, with the majority between +4.5 and +2.5‰. Data from the 2715 Ma Maddina Formation are more restricted, with εHfi between +4.0 and -0.1, and δ18O +5.0- +3.8‰. The youngest formation, the 2680 Ma Jeerinah Formation, has εHfi +2.3 to -6.2, and δ18O +5.1 to -2.1‰.</div><div> Importantly, these data provide little evidence of a cryptic enriched SCLM source in the Fortescue magmas. Furthermore, the dataset contains some of the lightest δ18O data known for Archean zircon, highlighting a ca. 100 Myr period of high-temperature magma-water interaction, with long-term continental emergence implied by the trend to meteoric δ18O compositions. The exception to this is the Hardey Formation, which may have formed via crustal anatexis in a period of reduced heat-flow between the 2775-2665 and 2730-2680 Ma events. Data from the other formations show a broad trend of increasing δ18O and εHf from 2775 to 2680 Ma. We suggest this represents the effects of progressive cratonic rifting, allowing mantle-derived magmas to reach the surface less impeded, and also a decreasing role of meteoric water in the rift zone as the sea invades. As a result, the εHf and δ18O data from the Fortescue Group represent the evolving nature of an Archean rift zone, from an emergent volcanic centre, to a submarine environment.</div><div><br></div>This Abstract was submitted/presented to the 2023 6th International Archean Symposium (6IAS) 25 - 27 July (https://6ias.org/)

  • Carnarvon Shelf reef polygons were manually digitized from multibeam echosounder datasets collected on marine survey GA0308 in August/September 2008. Reef areas were defined as exposed, hard substrate that are often raised above the surrounding seafloor. They were mapped using bathymetry and backscatter data along with bathymetric derivatives including; slope, hillshaded bathymetry and contours. Features were mapped at a scale of 1:10 000. This dataset is published with the permission of the CEO, Geoscience Australia.

  • The northern Houtman Sub-basin is an under-explored region of Australia’s western continental margin. It is located at the transition between the non-volcanic margin of the northern Perth Basin and the volcanic province of the Wallaby Plateau, and lies adjacent to the Wallaby-Zenith Transform Margin. In 2014-15, Geoscience Australia acquired new 2D seismic data (GA-349) across the northern Houtman Sub-basin to assess its hydrocarbon prospectivity. This study integrated interpretation of the recently acquired GA-349 survey, with Geoscience Australia’s existing regional interpretation of the Houtman and Abrolhos sub-basins, to develop a 2D structural and stratigraphic interpretation for the study area. As there are no wells in the northern Houtman sub-basin, the age and lithologies of the mapped sequences were derived from regional mapping, stratal relationships and seismic facies. The new data clearly images a large depocentre, including a much thicker Paleozoic section (up to 13 km) than previously recognised. Extending the length of the inboard part of northern sub-basin are a series of large half-graben (7-10 km thick), interpreted to have formed as a result of Permian rifting. Overlying these half-graben, and separated by an unconformity, is a thick succession (up to 6 km) interpreted to represent a subsequent late Permian to Early Jurassic phase of the thermal subsidence. A second phase of rifting started in the Early Jurassic and culminated in Early Cretaceous breakup. The sedimentary succession deposited during this phase of rifting is highly faulted and heavily intruded in the outboard part of the basin, adjacent to the Wallaby Saddle, where intrusive and extrusive complexes are clearly imaged on the seismic. In contrast to the southern part of the Houtman Sub-basin, which experienced rapid passive margin subsidence and regional tilting after the Valanginian breakup, the northern sub-basin remained mostly exposed sub-aerially until the Aptian while the Wallaby Zenith Fracture Zone continued to develop. Poster/Extended Abstract presented at the Australian Exploration Geoscience Conference (AEGC) 2018 (https://www.aig.org.au/events/first-australian-exploration-geoscience-conference/)

  • The product consists of 5,291 line kilometres of time-domain airborne electromagnetic (AEM) geophysical data acquired in the Fitzroy River Catchment of the West Kimberley region, the electrical conductivity models derived from the dataset, and the survey operations and processing report. The data were acquired using the heliborne SkyTEM-312 AEM system. A locality diagram for the survey is shown below. The survey was funded by the Government of Western Australia, as part of its Water for Food Initiative, through the Department of Water (WA DoW). The survey was managed by Geoscience Australia as part of a national collaborative framework project agreement with WA DoW. The aim of the survey was to map the electrical properties of the top 200-300 metres of the sub-surface geology and hydrogeology within the study area. Geoscience Australia contracted SkyTEM Australia Pty Ltd to acquire the AEM data using the SkyTEM-312 system in September and October 2015. The data were also processed by SkyTEM Australia Pty Ltd using its in-house processing and inversion techniques. The Kimberley Region in north-west Australia is a priority area for the development of irrigated agriculture. The hydrogeology of the area is poorly understood, hence the primary aim of the AEM survey was to provide geophysical data in support of groundwater investigations. Specific objectives of the AEM survey included mapping the extent of regional Canning Basin aquifers to aid assessment of groundwater resources and sustainable yield estimates for agricultural development; provide AEM data in transects to underpin studies of surface-groundwater interactions (groundwater discharge and recharge potential) associated with the major rivers, and permanent river pools in particular; detect and assess potential groundwater salinity hazards within proposed irrigation areas; and map the seawater intrusion (SWI) interface. Very specific mapping objectives were developed for each sub-area, and the survey was designed with these detailed local objectives in mind. The survey design reflects two scales of investigation: 1. Two areas (Knowsley-Mowanjum and GoGo-Fitzroy Crossing) with higher density flight line spacing (400 m) in areas with advanced plans for development of irrigated agriculture; 2. Irregular grid of regional transects and lines acquired along river tracts reflecting the reconnaissance nature of regional investigations in a frontier hydrogeological area. Much of the area lies underneath cover of sedimentary basins and is a poorly-understood element of Australia¿s geology. The Fitzroy Trough is also host to a number of mineral systems including diamonds and base metal mineralisation, as well as shale gas resources. The survey data should assist with understanding of the basin geology and neotectonics, while lamproite pipes have also been intersected in a number of flight lines. The survey data will also add to the knowledge of the thickness and character of alluvium and regolith cover and will inform future geological mapping in the region. The data will be available from Geoscience Australia¿s web site free of charge. The data release package includes: 1. Point-located electromagnetic line data with associated position, height, orientation, transmitter current, and derived ground elevation data. These data are in ASCII column format with associated ASEG-GDF2 header files. All regular survey, repeat lines and high altitude lines are included in the dataset. The dataset is split into Parts 1 and 2 based on the differences in the receiver gate times for each part. 2. Point-located magnetic line data with associated position, height, orientation, and derived ground elevation data. These data are in ASCII column format with associated ASEG-GDF2 header files. All regular survey, repeat lines and high altitude lines are included in the dataset. 3. Point-located line data for conductivity estimates derived by SkyTEM Australia Pty Ltd using its Automated Laterally Constrained Inversion (aLCI) algorithm with associated position, height, orientation, and derived ground elevation data. Data include the conductivity estimate for each of the 30 inversion model layers, the layer elevation, estimated depth of investigation, and data fit residuals. These data are in ASCII column format with associated ASEG-GDF2 header files. All regular survey and repeat lines are included in the dataset. 4. Gridded data for the derived ground elevations, total magnetic intensity, and the conductivity of the 30 aLCI inversion model layers. The grids are in ER Mapper® binary raster grid format with associated header files. The grids have a cell size of 100 m. For the aLCI inversion layer conductivity grids, there are versions that are masked (set to undefined) below the estimated depth of investigation and unmasked. 5. Graphical multiplots and spatial images derived from the aLCI inversion. The multiplots show the derived aLCI conductivity depth sections and selected data panels for each individual flight line in Portable Network Graphics (PNG) and Portable Document Format (PDF) formats. The spatial images show colour images of the conductivity for each aLCI model layer and are in PNG, PDF and geo-located Tagged Image Format (TIF) files suitable for use in MAPINFO. 6. The survey Operations and Processing Report, which provides the details of the AEM system, logistics, data acquisition, data processing and the aLCI inversion parameters. 7. ESRI shapefiles and KML files of flight lines. Summary Survey Name West Kimberley Airborne EM Survey, WA, 2015 (Water for Food) State Western Australia Sub Region West Kimberley Area 20,314 km2 Line km 5,291 km Survey Completed 17 October 2015 AEM system SkyTEM-312 Processing SkyTEM Australia Pty Ltd

  • <div>The Yilgarn Craton of Western Australia represents one of the largest pieces of Precambrian crust on Earth, and a key repository of information on the Meso-Neoarchean period. Understanding the crustal, tectonic, thermal, and chemical evolution of the craton is critical in placing these events into an accurate geological context, as well as developing holistic tectonic models for the Archean Earth. In this study, we collected a large U-Pb (420 collated samples) and Hf isotopic (2163 analyses) dataset on zircon to investigate the evolution of the craton. These data provide strong evidence for a Hadean-Eoarchean origin for the Yilgarn Craton from mafic crust at ca. 4000 Ma. This ancient cratonic nucleus was subsequently rifted, expanded and reworked by successive crustal growth events at ca. 3700 Ma, ca. 3300 Ma, 3000-2900 Ma, 2825-2800 Ma, and ca. 2730-2620 Ma. The <3050 Ma crustal growth events correlate broadly with known komatiite events, and patterns of craton evolution, revealed by Hf isotope time-slice mapping, image the periodic break-up of the Yilgarn proto-continent and the formation of rift-zones between the older crustal blocks. Crustal growth and new magmatic pulses were focused into these zones and at craton margins, resulting in continent growth via internal (rift-enabled) expansion, and peripheral (crustal extraction at craton margins) magmatism. Consequently, we interpret these major geodynamic processes to be analogous to plume-lid tectonics, where the majority of tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) felsic crust, and later granitic crust, was formed by reworking of hydrated mafic rocks and TTGs, respectively, via a combination of infracrustal and/or drip-tectonic settings. While this process of crust formation and evolution is not necessarily restricted to a specific geodynamic system, we find limited direct evidence that subduction-like processes formed a major tectonic component, aside from re-docking the Narryer Terrane to the craton at ca. 2740 Ma. Overall, these 'rift-expansion' and 'craton margin' crustal growth process led to an intra-cratonic architecture of younger, juvenile terranes located internal and external to older, long-lived, reworked crustal blocks. This framework provided pathways that localized later magmas and fluids, driving the exceptional mineral endowment of the Yilgarn Craton.</div> This Abstract/Poster was submitted to & presented at the 2023 6th International Archean Symposium (6IAS) 25 - 27 July (https://6ias.org/)

  • <div>The interpretation of AusAEM airborne electromagnetic (AEM) survey conductivity sections in the Canning Basin region delineates the geo-electrical features that correspond to major chronostratigraphic boundaries, and captures detailed stratigraphic information associated with these boundaries. This interpretation forms part of an assessment of the underground hydrogen storage potential of salt features in the Canning Basin region based on integration and interpretation of AEM and other geological and geophysical datasets. A main aim of this work was to interpret the AEM to develop a regional understanding of the near-surface stratigraphy and structural geology. This regional geological framework was complimented by the identification and assessment of possible near-surface salt-related structures, as underground salt bodies have been identified as potential underground hydrogen storage sites. This study interpreted over 20,000 line kilometres of 20&nbsp;km nominally line-spaced AusAEM conductivity sections, covering an area approximately 450,000 km2 to a depth of approximately 500&nbsp;m in northwest Western Australia. These conductivity sections were integrated and interpreted with other geological and geophysical datasets, such as boreholes, potential fields, surface and basement geology maps, and seismic interpretations. This interpretation produced approximately 110,000 depth estimate points or 4,000 3D line segments, each attributed with high-quality geometric, stratigraphic, and ancillary data. The depth estimate points are formatted for Geoscience Australia’s Estimates of Geological and Geophysical Surfaces database, the national repository for formatted depth estimate points. Despite these interpretations being collected to support exploration of salt features for hydrogen storage, they are also intended for use in a wide range of other disciplines, such as mineral, energy and groundwater resource exploration, environmental management, subsurface mapping, tectonic evolution studies, and cover thickness, prospectivity, and economic modelling. Therefore, these interpretations will benefit government, industry and academia interested in the geology of the Canning Basin region.</div>

  • Vlaming Shelf reef polygons were manually digitized from multibeam echosounder datasets collected on marine survey GA0334 in March/April 2012. Reef areas were defined as exposed, hard substrate that are often raised above the surrounding seafloor. They were mapped using bathymetry and backscatter data along with bathymetric derivatives including; slope, hillshaded bathymetry and contours. Features were mapped at a scale of 1:10 000. This dataset is published with the permission of the CEO, Geoscience Australia.