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Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

TECTONOSTRATIGRAPHIC EVOLUTION OF THE SOUTH-EAST GIPPSLAND BASIN

B.A. Duff, N.G. Groilman, D.J. Mason, J.M. Questiaux, D.S. Ormerod and P. Lays

The APPEA Journal 31(1) 116 - 130
Published: 1991

Abstract

Evolution of the south-east Gippsland Basin since ca. 96 Ma has been governed by the interaction of three distinct processes:

re-organisation of regional plate boundaries at 96, 80 and 50 Ma, registered as major angular unconformities or megasequence boundaries;

intra-basin response of cover to basement-controlled deformational phases, registered as the sequence boundaries within these megasequences; and

the more subtle balance between regressive sedimentation associated with these phases and the transgressive deposition associated with longer-term eustatic sea level rises.

The Golden Beach Megasequence (seismic sequences UK1 and UK2) accumulated syntectonically in an extensional setting characterised by an orthogonal array of north-northeast trending transfer faults and associated normal faults. Major compressional tectonism at ca. 80 Ma terminated this regime, initiating a modified mosaic of stratotectonic domains which controlled deposition of the Latrobe Megasequence.

The seismic sequences within this megasequence display two types of cyclicity distinguishing intra-Campanian to Top Maastrichtian sequences (UK3-UK5) from early Tertiary sequences (PL1, PL2 and EO1). The sequence boundaries are considered to be the expression of recurrent compressive deformational phases. They are demonstrable as angular unconformities in transpressional and pull-apart structures in domains within which deformation was focused over the older extensional grain.

The ca. 50 Ma Top Latrobe megasequence boundary appears to mark the transition from a basement-coupled deformational style characteristic of the Latrobe Megasequence, to a basement-decoupled inversion style of deformation during deposition of the Seaspray Megasequence (post-50 Ma).

Seismic sequence boundaries, at least within basins such as the Gippsland, are therefore the stratigraphic expression of deformational phases rather than signatures of global sea-level changes. Eustacy is not invariably a shorter-term process than basin tectonism, nor is it the sole or main determinant of depositional style.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ90010

© CSIRO 1991

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