GEOPHYSICAL INVESTIGATIONS IN THE AREA OF THE PERTH BASIN, WESTERN AUSTRALIA

Geophysics ◽  
1965 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 1026-1052 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. V. Hawkins ◽  
J. F. Hennion ◽  
J. E. Nafe ◽  
R. F. Thyer

Marine geophysical investigations in the area of the Perth Basin lead to proposed changes in the structural control of the basin and of the structure within the basin. The main north‐south graben structure appears to be crossed by a series of major faults which trend roughly north‐northwest. A broadening of the basin to a width of just over 100 km (65 miles) to the west in the area between Perth and Harvey, which was earlier indicated by aeromagnetic results, appears to be produced by two such faults: The southern fault does not cross the graben but merges with it in the form of the Dunsborough Fault; the proposed northern fault crosses the graben to produce a break in continuity of the Darling Fault which marks the eastern margin of the basin. The northern fault appears to have caused a division of the main sedimentation axis of the Perth Basin into two near parallel axes within the widened section of the basin. The Dandaragan Trough which forms the eastern axis now appears to terminate at the Darling Fault between Pinjarra and Harvey. The western axis continues to the southeast into the Bunbury Trough. This suggests the presence of a basement and anticlinal ridge which may produce favourable traps for oil or gas within the basin. The western margin of the basin appears to be formed by an eastward‐tilted basement with associated faulting which, in places, assumes major proportions. A tentative estimate of sediment thickness of about 5.7 km (18,600 ft) is obtained from a seismic profile near the axis of sedimentation on the extension of the Bunbury Trough. This figure is our preferred interpretation, but it would have to be reduced to about 3.5 km should a 5‐km/sec layer turn out to be basement. The southward extension of the Darling Fault onto the narrow continental shelf appears to be observed with a throw of two km to the south of Pt. D’Entrecasteau.

1979 ◽  
Vol 87 ◽  
pp. 1-29
Author(s):  
C.P Brett ◽  
E.F.K Zarudzki

An extensive shallow geophysical survey has been carried out on the West Greenland continental shelf between 64° and 69°30'N. Preliminary interpretation of the data reveals that between 64° and 67°30'N at least, the entire shelf was glaciated to its western margin during the Pleistocene, the glaciation processes leaving a variable (< 20-200 m thick) cover on the Tertiary sedimentary wedge underlying the shelf. A morphological relationship exists between the degree of sea floor roughness and the types of glaciation forms. The distribution and contacts of the three main shallow bedrock units in the area (Precambrian gneisses, Lower Tertiary volcanics and Tertiary sediments) are delineated. Widespread prograding is observed in sediments along the shelf margin. Extensive iceberg scouring of the sea floor is observed north of 67°30'N reaching a maximum water depth of 340 m.


The Coronation geosyncline developed in the early Proterozoic along the western margin of a continental platform (the Slave Province) of Archaean rocks older than 2300 Ma, and culminated between 1725 and 1855 Ma ago with the emplacement of a pair of batholiths (the Bear Province). The evolution of the geosyncline has a strong family resemblance to Phanerozoic geosynclines believed to delineate ancient continental margins and have been controlled by global plate interactions. Such geosynclines are unknown in Archaean orogenic belts, from which it is inferred that creation of the first large rigid continental platforms marked the end of the Archaean and the beginnings of actualistic plate tectonics. The geosyncline began with deposition of a westward-facing continental shelf, consisting of a lower formation dominated by orthoquartzite, derived from the platform, and an upper cyclic stromatolitic dolomite formation. West of the shelf edge, the dolomite passes abruptly into a much thinner mudstone sequence with dolomite debris-flows, and the orthoquartzite into a thick laminated silt and mudstone sequence with quartzite turbidites. The oldest rocks west of the shelf edge, an area interpreted to have been a continental rise, are pillow basalts and volcanic breccias, extruded above a basement of unknown character. The principal turning point in the evolution of the geosyncline came with the foundering of the continental shelf. It is draped by a thin laminated pyritic black mudstone sequence, overlain by a westward-thickening clastic wedge resulting from intrusion and erosion of the batholiths to the west. The clastic wedge begins with a thick sequence of coarse greywacke turbidites that passes eastward into concretionary mudstone on the platform. The mudstone grades upward into laminated shaly limestone with minor greywacke turbidites, overlain in turn by cross-bedded red lithic sandstone. The supracrustal rocks of the geosyncline have been compressed and tectonically transported toward the platform. Adjacent to the batholithic belt, the continental rise and clastic wedge sequences are penetratively deformed and recrystallized by regional low-pressure metamorphism. To the east, the unmetamorphosed continental shelf and clastic wedge sequences have been flexurally folded and overthrust above a basal detachment surface. East of the thrust zone, relatively thin rocks on the platform are nearly flat-lying except around large anticlinal basement uplifts. Unusual features of the platform are its two aulacogens - long-lived deeply subsiding fault troughs that extend at high angles from the geosyncline far into the interior of the platform. During every phase in the evolution of the geosyncline, the aulacogens received much thicker sedimentary sequences, commonly with the addition of basaltic volcanics, than adjacent parts of the platform. Although equal in thickness to the geosyncline, the aulacogens were never subjected to the batholithic intrusions, regional metamorphism or low-angle overthrusting characteristic of the geosyncline. The Athapuscow aulacogen, in the region of Great Slave Lake, is interpreted as having been an incipient rift, located over a crustal arch, during the continental shelf stage of the geosyncline, but sagged to become a crustal downwarp during the clastic wedge stage, ultimately with sufficient transverse compression to produce broad folds. Finally, the aulacogen became part of a regional transcurrent fault system, along which thick fanglomerates accumulated in local troughs. The batholithic belt consists of two batholiths, eroded to different depths, separated by the northtrending 350 km long Wopmay River fault. The Hepburn batholith, east of the fault, is a composite intrusion of mesozonal granodiorite plutons. The foliated and migmatitic borders of the plutons are normally concordant with wall rock sheaths of sillimanitic paragneiss. Along the eastern margin of the batholith, metamorphosed rocks of the continental rise sequence dip gently to the west beneath the batholithic rocks. Belts of intensely deformed and metamorphosed supracrustal rocks within the batholithic terrain include sequences of pillow basalt, pelites and granite-pebble conglomerate, perhaps the lower part of the continental rise deposited during the initial rifting of the continental margin. The Great Bear batholith, west of the fault, consists of discordant epizonal plutons, mostly adamellite, that intrude broadly folded but regionally unmetamorphosed sequences of welded rhyodacitic ash-flow tuff, trachybasalt and derived sedimentary rocks. The volcanic rocks, intruded by dense dyke swarms radiating from the plutons and by felsite plugs, are interpreted to be comagmatic with the plutons. Mapping is as yet insufficient to establish, speculations aside, the possible relations of the two batholiths to arc-trench systems. Furthermore, the western margin of the batholithic belt, a region of critical importance, is covered by a veneer of younger Proterozoic and Paleozoic sedimentary rocks. Until fossil arc-trench systems are outlined, the contention that the Coronation Geosyncline involved global plate interactions is based on indirect evidence - the analogous evolution of the geosyncline east of the batholithic belt with Phanerozoic geosynclines in which fossil arc-trench systems have been found.


2021 ◽  
Vol 130 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anya Chaudhuri ◽  
P Amol ◽  
D Shankar ◽  
S Mukhopadhyay ◽  
S G Aparna ◽  
...  

Harmful Algae ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 119-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert H. Weisberg ◽  
Lianyuan Zheng ◽  
Yonggang Liu ◽  
Chad Lembke ◽  
Jason M. Lenes ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Red Tide ◽  

Author(s):  
Michael Sheng-ti Gau ◽  
Si-han Zhao

Abstract In 2014 Japan’s Cabinet Order No. 302 declared the outer limits of its continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles (OL) to the west and north of Oki-no-Tori Shima (Area 302). Oki-no-Tori Shima consists of two small, barren, and uninhabitable rocks in the West Pacific. The northern part of Area 302 is broader than what the 2012 recommendations of the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS) specify. A question arises whether Order No. 302 violates Article 76(8) of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which provides that the OL established by a coastal state ‘on the basis of’ the CLCS recommendations shall be final and binding. Another question is the role played by the CLCS in ‘assisting’ the coastal states to delimit their national jurisdiction so as to know where the Area (i.e., the Common Heritage of Mankind under UNCLOS Articles 1(1)(1) and 136) begins. The essential questions arising from Area 302 concern how well the UNCLOS mechanism can perform to safeguard the Common Heritage of Mankind through preventing encroachment thereupon by individual coastal states. This article looks at the context and explores the obligations implied by Article 76(8) for coastal states to ‘follow’ the recommendations in establishing the OL, with special reference to the northern part of Area 302. The article also examines legal consequences arising from a breach of these obligations.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanley Oifoghe ◽  
Nora Alarcon ◽  
Lucrecia Grigoletto

Abstract Hydrocarbons are bypassed in known fields. This is due to reservoir heterogeneities, complex lithology, and limitations of existing technology. This paper seeks to identify the scenarios of bypassed hydrocarbons, and to highlight how advances in reservoir characterization techniques have improved assessment of bypassed hydrocarbons. The present case study is an evaluation well drilled on the continental shelf, off the West African Coastline. The targeted thin-bedded reservoir sands are of Cenomanian age. Some technologies for assessing bypassed hydrocarbon include Gamma Ray Spectralog and Thin Bed Analysis. NMR is important for accurate reservoir characterization of thinly bedded reservoirs. The measured NMR porosity was 15pu, which is 42% of the actual porosity. Using the measured values gave a permeability of 5.3mD as against the actual permeability of 234mD. The novel model presented in this paper increased the porosity by 58% and the permeability by 4315%.


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