Stocktake Sale on now: wide range of books at up to 70% off!
Register      Login
The APPEA Journal The APPEA Journal Society
Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

THE MOUNT ISA BASIN—DEFINITION, STRUCTURE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY

B.A. McConachie, M.G. Barlow, J.N. Dunster, R.A. Meaney and A.O. Schaap

The APPEA Journal 33(1) 237 - 257
Published: 1993

Abstract

The Mount Isa Basin is a new concept to describe the area of Palaeo- to Mesoproterozoic rocks south of the Murphy Inlier (not the Murphy Tectonic Ridge) and inappropriately described as the Mount Isa Inlier. The new basin concept presented in this paper allows the characterisation of basin-wide structural deformation and the recognition of areas with petroleum exploration potential.

The northern depositional margin of the Mount Isa Basin is the metamorphic, intrusive and volcanic complex referred to as the Murphy Inlier. The eastern, southern and western boundaries of the basin are obscured by younger basins (Carpentaria, Eromanga and Georgina Basins). The Murphy Inlier rocks comprise the seismic basement to the Mount Isa Basin sequence. Evidence for the continuity of the Mount Isa Basin with the McArthur Basin to the northwest and the Willyama Block (Basin) at Broken Hill to the south is presented. These areas combined with several other areas of similar age are believed to have comprised the Carpentarian Superbasin.

The application of seismic exploration within Authority to Prospect (ATP) 423P at the northern margin of the basin was critical to the recognition and definition of the Mount Isa Basin. The northern Mount Isa Basin is structurally analogous to the Palaeozoic Arkoma Basin of Oklahoma and Arkansas in the southern USA but as with all basins it contains unique characteristics, a function of its individual development history. The northern Mount Isa Basin is defined as the basin area northwest of the Mount Gordon Fault.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ92018

© CSIRO 1993

Committee on Publication Ethics


Export Citation Cited By (11)

View Dimensions