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  • Australia has been, and continues to be, a leader in isotope geochronology and geochemistry. While new isotopic data is being produced with ever increasing pace and diversity, there is also a rich legacy of existing high-quality age and isotopic data, most of which have been dispersed across a multitude of journal papers, reports and theses. Where compilations of isotopic data exist, they tend to have been undertaken at variable geographic scale, with variable purpose, format, styles, levels of detail and completeness. Consequently, it has been difficult to visualise or interrogate the collective value of age and isotopic data at continental-scale. Age and isotopic patterns at continental scale can provide intriguing insights into the temporal and chemical evolution of the continent (Fraser et al, 2020). As national custodian of geoscience data, Geoscience Australia has addressed this challenge by developing an Isotopic Atlas of Australia, which currently (as of November 2020) consists of national-scale coverages of four widely-used age and isotopic data-types: 4008 U-Pb mineral ages from magmatic, metamorphic and sedimentary rocks 2651 Sm-Nd whole-rock analyses, primarily of granites and felsic volcanics 5696 Lu-Hf (136 samples) and 553 O-isotope (24 samples) analyses of zircon 1522 Pb-Pb analyses of ores and ore-related minerals These isotopic coverages are now freely available as web-services for use and download from the GA Portal. While there is more legacy data to be added, and a never-ending stream of new data constantly emerging, the provision of these national coverages with consistent classification and attribution provides a range of benefits: vastly reduces duplication of effort in compiling bespoke datasets for specific regions or use-cases data density is sufficient to reveal meaningful temporal and spatial patterns a guide to the existence and source of data in areas of interest, and of major data gaps to be addressed in future work facilitates production of thematic maps from subsets of data. For example, a magmatic age map, or K-Ar mica cooling age map sample metadata such as lithology and stratigraphic unit is associated with each isotopic result, allowing for further filtering, subsetting and interpretation. The Isotopic Atlas of Australia will continue to develop via the addition of both new and legacy data to existing coverages, and by the addition of new data coverages from a wider range of isotopic systems and a wider range of geological sample media (e.g. soil, regolith and groundwater).

  • This Record presents new U–Pb geochronological data, obtained via Sensitive High Resolution Ion Micro Probe (SHRIMP), from 43 samples of predominantly igneous rocks collected from the East Riverina region of the central Lachlan Orogen, New South Wales. The results presented herein correspond to the reporting period July 2016–June 2020. This work is part of an ongoing Geochronology Project, conducted by the Geological Survey of New South Wales (GSNSW) and Geoscience Australia (GA) under a National Collaborative Framework agreement, to better understand the geological evolution and mineral prospectivity of the central Lachlan Orogen in southern NSW (Bodorkos et al., 2013; 2015; 2016, 2018; Waltenberg et al., 2019).

  • This Record presents 40Ar/39Ar chronologic results acquired in support of collaborative regional geoscientific investigations and mapping programs conducted by Geoscience Australia (GA) and the Northern Territory Geological Survey (NTGS). Argon isotopic data and interpretations from hornblende, muscovite, and biotite from seven samples collected from the Aileron Province in ALCOOTA , HUCKITTA, HALE RIVER, and ILLOGWA CREEK in the Northern Territory are presented herein. The results complement pre-existing geochronological constraints from U–Pb zircon and monazite analyses of the same or related samples, and provide new constraints on the thermal and deformation history of the Aileron Province. Three samples (2003082017, 2003082021, 2003083040) were taken from ALCOOTA in the northeastern portion of the Aileron Province. Biotite in sample 2003082017 from the ca 1.81 Ga Crooked Hole Granite records cooling below 320–280°C at 441 ± 5 Ma. Biotite in sample 2003082021 from the ca 1.73 Ga Jamaica Granite records cooling below 320–280°C at or after 414 ± 2 Ma. Muscovite in sample 2003083040 from the Delny Metamorphics, which were deposited after ca 1.82 Ga and preserve evidence for metamorphism at ca 1.72 Ga and 1.69 Ga, records cooling below 430–390°C at 399 ± 2 Ma. The fabrics preserved in the samples from the Crooked Hole Granite and Delny Metamorphics are interpreted to have formed due to dynamic metamorphism related to movement on the Waite River Shear Zone, an extension of the Delny Shear Zone, during the Palaeoproterozoic. Portions of the northeastern Aileron Province are unconformably overlain by the Neoproterozoic–Cambrian Georgina Basin, indicating these samples were likely at or near the surface by the Neoproterozoic. Together, these data indicate that rocks of the Aileron Province in ALCOOTA were subjected to heating above ~400°C during the Palaeozoic. Two samples (2003087859K, 2003087862F) of exoskarn from an indeterminate unit were taken from drillhole MDDH4 in the Molyhil tungsten–molybdenum deposit in central HUCKITTA. The rocks hosting the Molyhil tungsten–molybdenum deposit are interpreted as ca 1.79 Ga Deep Bore Metamorphics and ca 1.80 Ga Yam Gneiss. They experienced long-lived metamorphism during the Palaeoproterozoic, with supersolidus metamorphism observed until at least ca 1.72 Ga. Hornblende from sample 2003087859K indicates cooling below 520–480°C by 1702 ± 5 Ma and may closely approximate timing of skarn-related mineralisation at the Molyhil deposit; hornblende from sample 2003087862F records a phase of fluid flow at the Molyhil deposit at 1660 ± 4 Ma. The Salthole Gneiss has a granitic protolith that was emplaced at ca 1.79 Ga, and experienced alteration at ca 1.77 Ga. Muscovite from sample 2010080001 of Salthole Gneiss from the Illogwa Shear Zone in ILLOGWA CREEK records cooling of the sample below ~430–390°C at 327 ± 2 Ma. This may reflect the timing of movement of, or fluid flux along, the Illogwa Shear Zone. An unnamed quartzite in the Casey Inlier in HALE RIVER has a zircon U–Pb maximum depositional age of ca 1.24 Ga. Muscovite from sample HA05IRS071 of this unnamed quartzite yields an age of 1072 ± 8 Ma, which likely approximates, or closely post-dates, the timing of deformation in this sample; it provides the first direct evidence for a Mesoproterozoic episode of deformation in this part of the Aileron Province.

  • This Record contains new zircon and monazite U-Pb geochronological data obtained via Sensitive High-Resolution Ion Micro Probe (SHRIMP) from nine samples of volcanic, volcaniclastic and plutonic igneous rocks of the central Lachlan Orogen and the New England Orogen, New South Wales. These data were obtained during the reporting period July 2014-June 2015, under the auspices of the collaborative Geochronology Project between the Geological Survey of New South Wales (GSNSW) and Geoscience Australia (GA), which is part of the National Collaboration Framework (NCF).

  • The Roebuck Basin on Australia’s offshore north-western margin is the focus of a regional hydrocarbon prospectivity assessment being undertaken by the Offshore Energy Systems Section. This offshore program is designed to produce pre-competitive information to assist with the evaluation of the hydrocarbon resource potential of the central North West Shelf and attract exploration investment to Australia. As part of this program, molecular and isotopic analyses were undertaken by Geoscience Australia on gas samples from the well Dorado 1 and the raw data from these analyses are released in this report.

  • As part of the Exploring for the Future (EFTF) program, a chemostratigraphic framework for the Officer Basin was developed that correlates inorganic geochemical sequences between exploration wells. The Officer Basin spans 525,000 km2 across Western Australia and South Australia, where it remains an unproven frontier basin which has seen little exploration. The objective of this study was to undertake a bulk rock elemental chemostratigraphy study on ten historic wells in order to better correlate the Neoproterozoic and Cambrian sections. Ten study wells, five from Western Australia and five from South Australia, were selected, and core (241) and cuttings (1,245) samples were acquired from their respective state core libraries. All samples were analysed using Inductively Coupled Plasma-Optical Emission Spectrometry (ICP-OES) and Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS), resulting in quantitative data for 50 elements. The approximate proportions of dolomite, clastics, halite and anhydrite for the samples were derived using stoichiometric geochemical calculations. Halite was identified in some formations based on mud log and wireline data, but was not always preserved in the cuttings samples. This non-detection of halite resulted in poor matches between the wireline gamma ray (GR) and ChemGR profiles for halite-bearing units in some wells (e.g. Dragoon-1, Mulyawara-1, and Yowalga-3). Key element and ratios utilised to subdivide the strata were principally chosen to highlight changes in sediment provenance, climatic, and organic matter changes, as they typically have the best correlation potential over a greater distance. The stratigraphy within the study wells has been subdivided into eight chemostratigraphic mega-sequences referred to as MS1 to MS8, which are further subdivided into a total of twenty-four sequences. Mega-Sequences MS1 to MS4 broadly correspond to the published Neoproterozoic–Cambrian Centralian Supersequences (CS1 to CS4). While overall there is broad agreement between these two schemes, there are also sections where the stratigraphy has been reassigned. For example, within Kutjara-1, the section previously assigned to Centralian Supersequence CS2, and equivalent to the Cryogenian Tapley Hill Formation, is assigned to Mega-Sequence MS3 (not MS2). Within MS4, the lithostratigraphically defined members of the Observatory Hill Formation show some significant variation to the chemostratigraphy, with differences occurring within sequences MS4-S3, MS4-S4 and MS4-S5 (e.g. Birksgate-1; Trainor Echo-1). Mega-Sequence MS6 encompasses the Mount Chandler Sandstone in Trainor Echo-1 in the east and the lithological lateral equivalent Lennis Sandstone in Lungkarta-1/ST1 and Yowalga-1 in the west; however, these two argillaceous sandstones are chemically distinct. Carbonate-containing samples from three wells (Birksgate-1, Yowalga-3, and Giles-1) were analysed for their δ13Ccarb and δ18Ocarb isotope signature using Isotope-Ratio Mass Spectrometry (IRMS), with results from the least altered carbonates being of sufficient quality to attempt preliminary age dating. Comparison of the Officer Basin isotope data to global type sections enabled tentative correlation of the Yowalga-3 carbonates to the Tonian and late Ediacaran, and the Birksgate-1 carbonates to the early Cambrian. The geochemistry analyses from 10 basin-wide wells provide a robust dataset that has been used to confirm which sections correlate within the existing lithostratigraphic and sequence stratigraphic framework. This study also highlights where further work needs to be undertaken to elucidate the spatial and temporal relationships of some Cryogenian and early Cambrian sections across the entire basin, given that rocks of these ages contain both potential source and reservoir rocks for petroleum generation and accumulation.

  • The unexpected discovery of oil in Triassic sedimentary rocks of the Phoenix South 1 well on Australia’s North West Shelf (NWS) has catalysed exploration interest in pre-Jurassic plays in the region. Subsequent neighbouring wells Roc 1–2, Phoenix South 2–3 and Dorado 1–3 drilled between 2015 and 2019 penetrated gas and/or oil columns, with the Dorado field containing one of the largest oil resources found in Australia in three decades. This study aims to understand the source of the oils and gases of the greater Phoenix area, Bedout Sub-basin using a multiparameter geochemical approach. Isotopic analyses combined with biomarker data confirm that these fluids represent a new Triassic petroleum system on the NWS unrelated to the Lower Triassic Hovea Member petroleum system of the Perth Basin. The Bedout Sub-basin fluids were generated from source rocks deposited in paralic environments with mixed type II/III kerogen, with lagoonal organofacies exhibiting excellent liquids potential. The Roc 1–2 gases and the Phoenix South 1 oil are likely sourced proximally by Lower–Middle Triassic TR10–TR15 sequences. Loss of gas within the Phoenix South 1 fluid due to potential trap breach has resulted in the formation of in-place oil. These discoveries are testament to new hydrocarbon plays within the Lower–Middle Triassic succession on the NWS.

  • The Roebuck Basin on Australia’s offshore north-western margin is the focus of a regional hydrocarbon prospectivity assessment being undertaken by the Offshore Energy Systems Section. This offshore program is designed to produce pre-competitive information to assist with the evaluation of the hydrocarbon resource potential of the central North West Shelf and attract exploration investment to Australia. The recent oil and gas discoveries at Phoenix South 1 (2014), Roc 1 (2015-16), Roc 2 (2016), Phoenix South 2 (2016), Phoenix South 3 (2018), Dorado 1 (2018) and Dorado 2–3 (2019) in the Bedout Sub-basin demonstrate the presence of a petroleum system in Lower Triassic strata (Grosjean et al., 2021; Rollet et al., 2019). As part of this program, a range of organic geochemical analyses were acquired on petroleum fluids from the Dorado 1 and Roc 2 wells with these data released in this report.

  • <div>The Australian continent comprises a broad dichotomy of crustal settings; from the Archean–Proterozoic cratonic core in the centre and west, to the accretionary margin of the Tasmanides in the east. These continental blocks meet at the Tasman Line, where successive arc systems built the eastern third of Australia in ca. 250 Myrs. This interface represents one of Australia’s most fundamental crustal boundaries and is marked by the ca. 520–490 Ma Delamerian Orogen in south-eastern Australia. Despite its first-order crustal control on tectonism, magmatism, deformation, and mineral systems in the area, the Delamerian Orogen remains poorly understood. Here, we present new zircon Hf-O isotopic and trace element data on 32 samples across the south-east Tasman Line. This initial dataset, which will grow over the next 12 months as part of Geoscience Australia’s Exploring for the Future program, will be used to constrain the time-space crustal architecture and evolution of Australia’s south-eastern Precambrian cratonic margin. These first samples include Paleoarchean to Devonian felsic magmatic rocks from the eastern Gawler Craton, across the Delamerian Orogen, to the Central Lachlan Orogen, and show that the crust of south-east Australia has a significant pre-history, with crustal reworking a major feature across the region. Delamerian arc magmatism appears to have involved significant reworking of Australia’s south-eastern Precambrian margin, as recorded by sub-chondritic Hf-isotope data. Assuming a significant mantle-component in the initial arc magmas, contamination by the ancient overlying continental rocks, some as old as ca. 3250 Ma, resulted in less juvenile compositions. This observation suggests Australia’s south-eastern Gondwanan margin may have consisted of a west-dipping continental arc, rather than an offshore island arc. The ‘heavy’ supracrustal δ18O of magmatic rocks across the area since the Paleoproterozoic is testament to the long-lived terrestrial nature of this continental margin, and its influence on magmatism across >1 billion years of Earth history.&nbsp;</div> This Abstract was submitted/presented to the 2022 Specialist Group in Geochemistry, Mineralogy and Petrology (SGGMP) Conference 7-11 November (https://gsasggmp.wixsite.com/home/biennial-conference-2021)

  • An Isotopic Atlas of Australia (Fraser et al., 2020) provides a convenient visual overview of age and isotopic patterns reflecting geological processes that have led to the current configuration of the Australian continent, including progressive development of continental crust from the mantle. This poster provides example maps produced from compiled data of multiple geochronology and isotopic tracer datasets from this Isotopic Atlas, now publicly available and downloadable via Geoscience Australia’s (GA) Exploring for the Future (EFTF) <a href="https://portal.ga.gov.au/persona/geochronology">Geochronology and Isotopes Data Portal</a> and Mineral Resources Tasmania’s <a href="https://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/mrt_maps/app/list/map">Listmap</a>. These datasets and maps unlock the collective value of several decades of geochronological and isotopic studies conducted across Australia. Compiled geochronology, which commenced with coverage of northern Australia (Jones et al., 2018), is now much more comprehensive across Victoria (Waltenberg et al., 2021) and Tasmania (Jones et al., in press), with New South Wales and South Australia updates well underway. Available data include: Sm–Nd model ages of magmatic rocks; Lu–Hf isotopes from zircon and associated O-isotope data; Pb–Pb isotopes from ore-related minerals such as galena and pyrite; Rb–Sr isotopes from soils; U–Pb ages of magmatic, metamorphic and sedimentary rocks; and K–Ar, Ar–Ar, Re–Os, Rb–Sr and fission-track ages from minerals and whole rocks. <b>To view the associated poster see <a href="https://dx.doi.org/10.26186/147420">eCat 147420</a>. This Abstract & Poster were presented to the 2022 Specialist Group in Tectonics & Structural Geology(SGTSG) Conference 22-24 November (https://www.sgtsg.org/). </b> <i>Fraser, G.L., Waltenberg, K., Jones, S.L., Champion, D.C., Huston, D.L., Lewis, C.J., Bodorkos, S., Forster, M., Vasegh, D., Ware, B., Tessalina, S. 2020. An Isotopic Atlas of Australia. Geoscience Australia, Canberra. https://doi.org/10.11636/133772. Geoscience Australia. 2021. Geoscience Australia Exploring for the Future portal, viewed 13 September 2022. https://portal.ga.gov.au/persona/geochronology. Jones, S.L., Anderson, J.R., Fraser, G.L., Lewis, C.J., McLennan, S.M. 2018. A U-Pb Geochronology Compilation for Northern Australia: Version 2, 2018. Geoscience Australia Record 2018/49. https://doi.org/10.11636/Record.2018.049. Jones, S.L., Waltenberg, K., Ramesh, R., Cumming, G., Everard, J.L., Vicary, M.J., Bottrill, R.S., Knight, K., McNeill, A.W., Bodorkos, S., Meffre, S. in press. Isotopic Atlas of Australia: Geochronology compilation for Tasmania Version 1.0. Geoscience Australia Record. Mineral Resources Tasmania. 2022. Mineral Resources Tasmania Listmap, viewed 19 September 2022. https://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/mrt_maps/app/list/map. Waltenberg, K., Jones, S.L., Duncan, R.J., Waugh, S., Lane, J. 2021. Isotopic Atlas of Australia: Geochronology compilation for Victoria Version 1.0. Geoscience Australia Record 2021/24. https://doi.org/10.11636/Record.2021.024. </i>