GIFFSLAND HYDROCARBONS - A PERSPECTIVE FROM THE BASIN EDGE
The APPEA Journal
24(1) 91 - 100
Published: 1984
Abstract
Permit VIC/P19 lies palaeogeographically seaward of the main producing part of the Gippsland Basin. Deposition of the Latrobe Group commenced with volcanics and continental 'rift-stage' sediments during the Late Cretaceous. This phase was succeeded first by paludal sedimentation in the failed rift during the Campanian and Maastrichtian, and then by cyclic paralic sedimentation during the Paleocene and Eocene.Analysis of the hydrocarbons recovered during recent exploration of permit VIC/P19 shows that they were sourced from moderately mature coals and carbonaceous shales in the Campanian/-Maastrichtian paludal sequence.
A maturation model that assumes elevated but decreasing heat flow, related to sea-floor spreading, produces an excellent fit to the observed maturity data and predicts a long history of hydrocarbon generation during the Tertiary. The maturity of the Upper Cretaceous source sequence depends more on the thickness of the overlying Lower Tertiary clastic Latrobe sediments than on the thickness of the Upper Tertiary carbonate wedge. The Late Tertiary phase of burial had relatively little effect on maturation because of its rapidity and the lower heat flow and higher thermal conductivities of the deeper sequence at the time. Overpressures in mature Upper Cretaceous source rocks, resulting from hydrocarbon generation, have driven pore fluids, including hydrocarbons, laterally up-dip into normally pressured reservoirs.
The main oil province of the Gippsland Basin has a greater thickness of Lower Tertiary than has VIC/P19. As a result, source rocks are more mature there, and became wholly so by the end of deposition of the Latrobe Group. This facilitated charge of traps at the top of the Latrobe Group, which contain most of the oil and gas discovered to date in the Basin.
https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ83005
© CSIRO 1984