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Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

STRUCTURE AND STRATIGRAPHY OF THE CEDUNA TERRACE REGION, GREAT AUSTRALIAN BIGHT BASIN

A. R. Fraser and L. A. Tilbury

The APPEA Journal 19(1) 53 - 65
Published: 1979

Abstract

The Ceduna Terrace is a bathymetric feature covering some 70,000 sq km, in the continental slope of South Australia. Its most gently sloping part lies between the 500 and 2500m isobaths, and is underlain by the main depocentre of the Great Australian Bight Basin.

A systematic interpretation of the region has been made, based on 17,000 km of multi-channel seismic data from Shell surveys, 8000 km of single-channel seismic, gravity and magnetic data from the BMR Continental Margins Survey, and 6000 km of gravity and magnetic data from surveys by Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory. Seismic ties were made to the wells Potoroo-1 and Platypus-1.

Mapping of the key seismic horizons confirms the picture of the basin as a sedimentary wedge, more than 10 km thick, extending from the edge of the shelf to the continental rise. Three important unconformities can be mapped over a wide area and tied to Potoroo-1 well-a basement reflector separating Lower Proterozoic crystalline rocks of the Gawler Craton from an overlying, block-faulted sequence of mainly Lower to mid-Cretaceaus sediments; an unconformity at the base of an Upper Cretaceous sequence which includes a major prograded unit in the west; and a break-up unconformity at the base of a Tertiary marine transgressive sequence, that, in turn, is overlain by marine carbonate deposits. Widespread shallow marine sediments are believed to exist in the west of the basin, in both the Lower and Upper Cretaceous sequences.

Structure is dominated by normal, west to NW trending, down-to-the-south faults, many of which are synsedimentary. Fault displacements are greatest beneath the shelf-break, where basement has been downthrown 5 to 6 km. Farther south, synsedimentary faulting has resulted in a marked thickening of both Upper and Lower Cretaceous sequences.

The basin has been barely explored for hydrocarbons. Regional seismic coverage is good, but drilling in the main part of the basin is limited to one well on the northern margin. The petroleum potential of the western half of the basin is rated as good, in view of the interpreted existence of abundant marine source beds and the recognition of situations favourable for generation, migration and entrapment of hydrocarbons.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ78007

© CSIRO 1979

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