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ASEG Extended Abstracts ASEG Extended Abstracts Society
ASEG Extended Abstracts
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The present-day stress field of Australia: New release of the Australian Stress Map

Mojtaba Rajabi, Mark Tingay, Rosalind King and Dennis Cooke

ASEG Extended Abstracts 2015(1) 1 - 3
Published: 2015

Abstract

The present-day stress field is important for a range of earth science disciplines including petroleum and geothermal geomechanics, mine safety, neotectonics and seismic hazard assessment. So far, many studies have been carried out to understand the state of stress in different parts of the world and the results reveal that the contemporary tectonic stress field can range from being uniform over large areas (100s-1000s of kilometres) to being highly varied over short distances (10s-100s of meters) due to interaction of different parameters. One of the most well-known examples of a heterogeneous stress pattern is observed in the Australian continent, which displays a wide range of stress orientations from province to province that, unlike all other major plates, are not aligned with absolute plate motion. The Australian Stress Map (ASM) project was started in 1996 to compile a public data set of maximum horizontal present-day tectonic stress information to determine and understand the state of stress in the Australian crust. The early phases of the ASM revealed that plate boundary forces provide the first-order control on the present-day stress pattern. However, all models of the stress field have failed to replicate the stress pattern in Eastern, and particularly north-eastern, Australia. The ASM project commenced again in 2012 with a primary aim of building up the database in Eastern Australia, such as new hydrocarbon provinces, and to help better establish the controls on the Australian stress field at scales ranging from tectonic plate down to individual fields and wells. To date, we have interpreted more than 400 borehole image logs in coal seam gas, mineral and conventional petroleum wells. The results show that local sources of stress (i.e. second and third orders) play a key role in the stress pattern of Australia which is an important issue for geothermal and unconventional exploration and production.

https://doi.org/10.1071/ASEG2015ab303

© ASEG 2015

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