A REVIEW OF RECENT GEOLOGICAL WORK IN THE OFFICER BASIN, SOUTH AUSTRALIA
The APPEA Journal
20(1) 209 - 220
Published: 1980
Abstract
The Officer Basin of South and Western Australia, in its broadest definition, contains a sequence of Late Proterozoic to pre-Permian strata with an unknown number of stratigraphic breaks. Recent investigations by the South Australian Department of Mines and Energy (SADME), which included helicopter-based geological surveys and stratigraphic drilling, have upgraded the petroleum potential of the basin.SADME Byilkaoora-1, drilled in the northeastern Officer Basin in 1979, contained hydrocarbon shows in the form of oil exuding from partly sealed vugs and fractures in argillaceous carbonates. Equivalent carbonates were intersected in SADME Marla-1A and 1B. Previously, in 1976, SADME Murnaroo-1 encountered shales and carbonates with moderate organic carbon content overlying a thick potential reservoir sandstone, while SADME Wilkinson-1, drilled in 1978, contained a carbonate sequence with marginally mature to mature oil-prone source rocks. Acritarchs extracted from the last mentioned carbonates indicate an Early Cambrian age.
All ?Cambrian carbonate sequences recognised to date in the Officer Basin of South Australia are correlated with the Observatory Hill Beds, which are now considered to be the major potential source of petroleum in the eastern Officer Basin.
https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ79019
© CSIRO 1980