GEOCHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF AUSTRALIA'S SOUTHERN MARGIN PETROLEUM SYSTEMS

1999 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 297 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.S. Edwards ◽  
H.I.M. Struckmeyer ◽  
M.T. Bradshaw ◽  
J.E. Skinner

The hydrocarbons discovered to date on the southern margin of Australia have been assigned to the Austral Petroleum Supersystem based on the age of their source rocks and common tectonic history. Modelling of the source facies distribution within this supersystem using tectonic, climatic and geographic history of the southern margin basins, suggests the presence of a variety of source rocks deposited in saline playa lakes, fluvial, lacustrine, deltaic and anoxic marine environments.Testing of the palaeogeographic model using geochemical characteristics of liquid hydrocarbons confirms the three-fold subdivision (Al, A2 and A3) of the Austral Petroleum Supersystem.Bass Basin oils are assigned to the Austral 3, Eastern View Petroleum System. The presence of oleanane in the biomarker assemblages of these oils, together with their negatively sloping, heavy, isotopic profiles, indicate derivation from Upper Cretaceous-Tertiary fluvio–deltaic source facies.In the eastern Otway Basin, oils of the Austral 2, Eumeralla Petroleum System are sourced by Lower Cretaceous (Aptian–Albian) coaly facies. Oil shows reservoired in the Wigunda Formation at Greenly-1 in the Duntroon Basin are possibly sourced from the Borda Formation and are assigned to the Austral 2, Borda Petroleum System.In the western Otway, Duntroon and Bight basins, a lack of definitive oil-source rock correlations precludes the identification of individual Austral 1 petroleum systems.

2013 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 427
Author(s):  
Emmanuelle Grosjean ◽  
Chris Boreham ◽  
Andrew Jones ◽  
Diane Jorgensen ◽  
John Kennard

The discovery of commercial oil in the Cliff Head-1 well in 2001 set an important milestone in the exploration history of the offshore northern Perth Basin. The region had been less explored before then, partly due to the perception that the main source of onshore petroleum accumulations, the Late Permian-Early Triassic Hovea Member, had only marginal potential offshore. The typing of the Cliff Head oil to the Hovea Member provided evidence that the key onshore petroleum system extends offshore and has revitalised exploration with 13 new field wildcat wells drilled since 2002. A reassessment of the hydrocarbon generative potential in the offshore northern Perth Basin confirms the widespread occurrence of good to excellent oil-prone Hovea Member source rocks in the Beagle Ridge and Abrolhos Sub-basin. The Early Permian Irwin River Sequence and several Jurassic Sequences are also recognised as prime potential source rocks offshore, mostly for their gas-generative potential. The unique hydrocarbon assemblages exhibited by the Hovea Member extracts are shared by the oils recovered from Permian reservoirs in the offshore Cliff Head-3 and Dunsborough-1 wells, indicating the Hovea Member as the primary source charging these accumulations. Geochemical correlation of oil stains from Hadda-1 and as far north as Livet-1 provides evidence for a working Early Triassic petroleum system across much of the Abrolhos Sub-basin. In this area, the Hovea Member was shown to be both of limited quality and only marginally mature for oil generation, which suggests the occurrence of effective source kitchens in the adjacent Houtman Sub-basin.


2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 187-197 ◽  
Author(s):  
Iain C. Scotchman ◽  
Anthony G. Doré ◽  
Anthony M. Spencer

AbstractThe exploratory drilling of 200 wildcat wells along the NE Atlantic margin has yielded 30 finds with total discovered resources of c. 4.1×109 barrels of oil equivalent (BOE). Exploration has been highly concentrated in specific regions. Only 32 of 144 quadrants have been drilled, with only one prolific province discovered – the Faroe–Shetland Basin, where 23 finds have resources totalling c. 3.7×109 BOE. Along the margin, the pattern of discoveries can best be assessed in terms of petroleum systems. The Faroe–Shetland finds belong to an Upper Jurassic petroleum system. On the east flank of the Rockall Basin, the Benbecula gas and the Dooish condensate/gas discoveries have proven the existence of a petroleum system of unknown source – probably Upper Jurassic. The Corrib gas field in the Slyne Basin is evidence of a Carboniferous petroleum system. The three finds in the northern Porcupine Basin are from Upper Jurassic source rocks; in the south, the Dunquin well (44/23-1) suggests the presence of a petroleum system there, but of unknown source. This pattern of petroleum systems can be explained by considering the distribution of Jurassic source rocks related to the break-up of Pangaea and marine inundations of the resulting basins. The prolific synrift marine Upper Jurassic source rock (of the Northern North Sea) was not developed throughout the pre-Atlantic Ocean break-up basin system west of Britain and Ireland. Instead, lacustrine–fluvio-deltaic–marginal marine shales of predominantly Late Jurassic age are the main source rocks and have generated oils throughout the region. The structural position, in particular relating to the subsequent Early Cretaceous hyperextension adjacent to the continental margin, is critical in determining where this Upper Jurassic petroleum system will be most effective.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Spalding ◽  
Jeremy Powell ◽  
David Schneider ◽  
Karen Fallas

<p>Resolving the thermal history of sedimentary basins through geological time is essential when evaluating the maturity of source rocks within petroleum systems. Traditional methods used to estimate maximum burial temperatures in prospective sedimentary basin such as and vitrinite reflectance (%Ro) are unable to constrain the timing and duration of thermal events. In comparison, low-temperature thermochronology methods, such as apatite fission track thermochronology (AFT), can resolve detailed thermal histories within a temperature range corresponding to oil and gas generation. In the Peel Plateau of the Northwest Territories, Canada, Phanerozoic sedimentary strata exhibit oil-stained outcrops, gas seeps, and bitumen occurrences. Presently, the timing of hydrocarbon maturation events are poorly constrained, as a regional unconformity at the base of Cretaceous foreland basin strata indicates that underlying Devonian source rocks may have undergone a burial and unroofing event prior to the Cretaceous. Published organic thermal maturity values from wells within the study area range from 1.59 and 2.46 %Ro for Devonian strata and 0.54 and 1.83 %Ro within Lower Cretaceous strata. Herein, we have resolved the thermal history of the Peel Plateau through multi-kinetic AFT thermochronology. Three samples from Upper Devonian, Lower Cretaceous and Upper Cretaceous strata have pooled AFT ages of 61.0 ± 5.1 Ma, 59.5 ± 5.2 and 101.6 ± 6.7 Ma, respectively, and corresponding U-Pb ages of 497.4 ± 17.5 Ma (MSWD: 7.4), 353.5 ± 13.5 Ma (MSWD: 3.1) and 261.2 ± 8.5 Ma (MSWD: 5.9). All AFT data fail the χ<sup>2</sup> test, suggesting AFT ages do not comprise a single statistically significant population, whereas U-Pb ages reflect the pre-depositional history of the samples and are likely from various provenances. Apatite chemistry is known to control the temperature and rates at which fission tracks undergo thermal annealing. The r<sub>mro</sub> parameter uses grain specific chemistry to predict apatite’s kinetic behaviour and is used to identify kinetic populations within samples. Grain chemistry was measured via electron microprobe analysis to derive r<sub>mro</sub> values and each sample was separated into two kinetic populations that pass the χ<sup>2</sup> test: a less retentive population with ages ranging from 49.3 ± 9.3 Ma to 36.4 ± 4.7 Ma, and a more retentive population with ages ranging from 157.7 ± 19 Ma to 103.3 ± 11.8 Ma, with r<sub>mr0</sub> benchmarks ranging from 0.79 and 0.82. Thermal history models reveal Devonian strata reached maximum burial temperatures (~165°C-185°C) prior to late Paleozoic to Mesozoic unroofing, and reheated to lower temperatures (~75°C-110°C) in the Late Cretaceous to Paleogene. Both Cretaceous samples record maximum burial temperatures (75°C-95°C) also during the Late Cretaceous to Paleogene. These new data indicate that Devonian source rocks matured prior to deposition of Cretaceous strata and that subsequent burial and heating during the Cretaceous to Paleogene was limited to the low-temperature threshold of the oil window. Integrating multi-kinetic AFT data with traditional methods in petroleum geosciences can help unravel complex thermal histories of sedimentary basins. Applying these methods elsewhere can improve the characterisation of petroleum systems.</p>


2015 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 297
Author(s):  
Malcolm Bendall ◽  
Clive Burrett ◽  
Paul Heath ◽  
Andrew Stacey ◽  
Enzo Zappaterra

Prior to the onshore work of Empire Energy Corporation International (Empire) it was widely believed that the widespread sheets (>650 m thick) of Jurassic dolerite (diabase) would not only have destroyed the many potential petroleum source and reservoir rocks in the basin but would also absorb seismic energy and would be impossible to drill. By using innovative acquisition parameters, however, major and minor structures and formations can be identified on the 1,149 km of 2D Vibroseis. Four Vibroseis trucks were used with a frequency range of 6–140 Hz with full frequency sweeps close together, thereby achieving maximum input and return signal. Potential reservoir and source rocks may be seismically mapped within the Gondwanan Petroleum System (GPS) of the Carboniferous to Triassic Parmeener Supergroup in the Tasmania Basin. Evidence for a working GPS is from a seep of migrated, Tasmanite-sourced, heavy crude oil in fractured dolerite and an oil-bearing breached reservoir in Permian siliciclastics. Empire’s wells show that each dolerite sheet consists of several intrusive units and that contact metamorphism is usually restricted to within 70 m of the sheets’ lower margins. In places, there are two thick sheets, as on Bruny Island. One near-continuous 6,500 km2 sheet is mapped seismically across central Tasmania and is expected, along with widespread Permian mudstones, to have acted as an excellent regional seal. The highly irregular pre-Parmeener unconformity can be mapped across Tasmania and large anticlines (Bellevue and Thunderbolt prospects and Derwent Bridge Anticline) and probable reefs can be seismically mapped beneath this unconformity within the Ordovician Larapintine Petroleum System. Two independent calculations of mean undiscovered potential (or prospective) resources in structures defined so far by Empire’s seismic surveys are 596.9 MMBOE (millions of barrels of oil equivalent) and 668.8 MMBOE.


1997 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 117 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.W. Baillie ◽  
E.P. Jacobson

The Carnarvon Basin is Australia's leading producer of both liquid hydrocarbons and gas. Most oil production to date has come from the Barrow Sub-basin. The success of the Sub-basin is due to a fortuitous combination of good Mesozoic source rocks which have been generating over a long period of time, Lower Cretaceous reservoir rocks with excellent porosity and permeability, and a thick and effective regional seal.A feature of Barrow Sub-basin fields is that they generally produce far more petroleum than is initially estimated and booked, a result of the excellent reservoir quality of the principal producing reservoirs.Structural traps immediately below the regional seal (the 'top Barrow play') have been the most successful play to date. Analysis of 'new' and 'old' play concepts show that the Sub-basin has potential for significant additional hydrocarbon reserves.


AAPG Bulletin ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 89 (11) ◽  
pp. 1519-1545 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Fildani ◽  
Andrew D. Hanson ◽  
Zhengzheng Chen ◽  
J. Michael Moldowan ◽  
Stephan A. Graham ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Alina Kosmacheva ◽  
Marina Fedorovich

AbstractThe paper is aimed at the basin and petroleum system modeling in the conjunction zone of the Alexander and Srednevasyugan anticlines and Ust-Tym depression during the Mesozoic-Cenozoic time. The exploration area is located in the southeastern part of the West Siberian hydrocarbon province. The present research primarily identifies the oil-window-entry time, maturity, generation points, generation power, and remaining potential of the Togur and Bazhenov source rocks. The Togur oil-window-entry time is 139.5 Ma. The Bazhenov oil-window-entry time is 99 Ma. Liquid hydrocarbons are extensively generated by the source rocks at the present time, since the Togur and Bazhenov Formations are found to be in the oil window. The significant amount of generated hydrocarbons is lost in migration processes. The source rock generation power and remaining potential are 1.1 and 1.5 billion tons of hydrocarbons, respectively.


2012 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 29
Author(s):  
Totterdell Jennie

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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