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Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

SIMPSON DESERT SUB-BASIN—A PROMISING PERMIAN TARGET

George E. Williams

The APPEA Journal 13(1) 33 - 40
Published: 1973

Abstract

Sediments of three major basins occur in the Simpson Desert region of central Australia:

Cambro -Ordovician dolomites and sandstones, and Siluro- Devonian conglomerates, sandstones and shales, related to the Amadeus Basin:

Permian conglomerates, sandstones, shales and coals of the Simpson Desert Sub-basin, the extensive eastern lobe of the Pedirka Basin:

Mesozoic sandstones and shales of the Eromanga Basin.

Principal petroleum exploration interest is presently directed toward the Permian sediments, which have many features in common with the petroleum producing Permian section of the neighbouring Cooper Basin.

Lower Permian sediments known from drilling in the Simpson Desert Sub-basin comprise glaciofluvial conglomerates and sandstones overlain by fluvial and lacustrine sandstones, silt-stones, shales and coals. The maximum thickness encountered in wells is 1,479 ft (448 m) in Mokari 1.

Recent seismic exploration 50 to 100 mi (80-160 km) west of Poeppel Corner in the deeper part of the Simpson Desert Sub-basin indicates that an additional sediment package up to 1,500 ft (350 m) thick occurs at depths of 6,500 to 7,500 ft (2,000-2,300 m) between Lower Permian and Lower Jurassic sections. This sediment package, nowhere penetrated by drilling, may be Middle to Upper Permian and/or Triassic in age. It is of great significance to petroleum exploration in the sub-basin and substantially upgrades the hydrocarbon prospects of the region.

Permian sediments in the Simpson Desert Sub-basin thin by onlap, wedge out and stripping over the crests of anticlinal growth structures. Crestal sediments probably comprise mainly porous sandstones, grading off-structure into thicker sequences containing carbonaceous shales and coals. Such carbonaceous potential source rocks are probably best developed in the deepest part of the sub-basin, where Triassic cap rock may also be present. Two particularly promising drilling targets—the Colson Anticline and the East Colson Anticline—have been revealed by recent geophysical surveys in this portion of the sub-basin. Wells drilled on these structures may intersect Permo-Triassic sediments up to 2,200 + ft (670 in) thick which are comparable in age and type with producing sections in the Cooper Basin.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ72006

© CSIRO 1973

Committee on Publication Ethics


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