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The APPEA Journal The APPEA Journal Society
Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

TECTONOSTRATIGRAPHY AND POTENTIAL SOURCE ROCKS OF THE BASS BASIN

J.E. Blevin, K.R. Trigg, A.D. Partridge, C.J. Boreham and S.C. Lang

The APPEA Journal 45(1) 601 - 622
Published: 2005

Abstract

A study of the Bass Basin using a basin-wide integration of seismic data, well logs, biostratigraphy and seismic/sequence stratigraphy has resulted in the identification of six basin phases and related megasequences/ supersequences. These sequences correlate to three periods of extension and three subsidence phases. The complex nature of facies relationships across the basin is attributed to the mostly terrestrial setting of the basin until the Middle Eocene, multiple phases of extension, strong compartmentalisation of the basin due to underlying basement fabric, and differential subsidence during extension and early subsidence phases. The Bass Basin formed through upper crustal extension associated with three main regional events:

rifting in the Southern Margin Rift System;

rifting associated with the formation of the Tasman Basin; and,

prolonged separation, fragmentation and clearance between the Australian and Antarctic plates along the western margin of Tasmania.

The final stage of extension was the result of far-field stresses that were likely to be oblique in orientation. The late Early Eocene to Middle Eocene was a time of rifttransition and early subsidence as the effects of intra-plate stresses progressively waned from east to west. Most of the coaly source rocks now typed to liquid hydrocarbon generation were deposited during this rift-transition phase. Biostratigraphic studies have identified three major lacustrine episodes during the Late Cretaceous to Middle Eocene. The lacustrine shales are likely to be more important as seal facies, while coals deposited fringing the lakes are the principal source rocks in the basin.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ04045

© CSIRO 2005

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