PETROLEUM SYSTEMS AND EXPLORATION POTENTIAL IN THE OFFICER BASIN, WESTERN AUSTRALIA
The APPEA Journal
43(1) 473 - 494
Published: 2003
Abstract
The Officer Basin in Western Australia contains a variety of hydrocarbon plays associated with compressional, halokinetic, unconformity and stratigraphic traps. Five distinct structural zones have been defined in the basin—a northeastern Marginal Overthrusted Zone, a northeastern Salt-ruptured Zone, a central Thrusted Zone, a Western Platform and a complex salt-dominated Minibasins Zone. These zones, together with salt-associated and sub-salt structure, are well delineated on about 2,900 km of reprocessed 1980s vintage seismic data, now publicly released.Neoproterozoic rocks are marginally to fully mature for oil generation on the Western Platform and immature to overmature for different levels of the succession in the Salt-ruptured and Thrusted zones. Geochemical modelling indicates that the main phases of oil generation vary from different stratigraphic intervals and different parts of the Neoproterozoic basin with peaks during the latest Neoproterozoic, Cambrian, and Permian–Triassic. A variety of hydrocarbon shows have been recorded in each of the structural zones. The most recent, a gas show recorded in the stratigraphic well Vines–1 indicates the presence of potentially effective petroleum systems in the unexplored Waigen area of the Marginal Overthrusted Zone.
A wide variety of trap styles have been identified, associated with normal faults, thrust faults, thrust ramp folds, compressive folds, fault tip folds, sub-salt plays, unconformity truncations, pinchouts, lateral facies changes, erosive channels and valleys, fractured carbonates and halokinetic traps. Most of these trap styles are poorly tested or untested.
https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ02025
© CSIRO 2003