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

HYDROCARBON SOURCE POTENTIAL OF THE GOLDWYER FORMATION, BARBWIRE TERRACE, CANNING BASIN, WESTERN AUSTRALIA

C.B. Foster, G.W. O'Brien and S.T. Watson

The APPEA Journal 26(1) 142 - 155
Published: 1986

Abstract

The Goldwyer Formation is widely known from the subsurface Canning Basin, Western Australia. Microfossils of acritarchs, chitinozoans, and conodonts, and macrofossil remains, indicate it was deposited in a normal marine environment in late Early to Middle Ordovician times (Late Arenig to Llanvirn). In Exploration Permit areas 143 and 225, the Formation is subdivided into four lithologic members, informally designated Units 1 to 4 in ascending stratigraphic order. Horizons within Unit 4, immediately underlying the prospective reservoir dolostones of the Nita Formation, are organic rich with between 0.5 and 6 per cent total organic carbon. Generative potential of these horizons, determined by Rock-Eval, averages 13 litres of hydrocarbon per tonne. A conservative estimate of the cumulative thickness of source rock with hydrogen index (HI) values of 300-900, using whole core fluorescence intensity, is 10 m. Thus, under optimum maturation conditions there is potential for generation of an estimated 61 × 109 barrels of liquids from Unit 4 within EP 143 and EP 225. These figures are based on an integrated analysis of 44 core samples from four fully cored 'slim holes' and cores from one conventional oil well. Kero-gen types and measures of organic maturity cannot be determined accurately from the standard Rock-Eval HI/Tmax crossplot. The dominant oil-prone kerogen in Unit 4 is Gloeocapsamorpha prisca Zalessky 1917 and palynological and gas chromatographic/mass spectrometric studies correlate it with Ordovician kerogens from the Baltic Basin, Michigan and Illinois basins, and Amadeus Basin. Gas chromatographic/mass spectrometric source rock-oil correlations show that oils from the Williston Basin (USA), Canning Basin, and Amadeus Basin are derived predominantly from G. prisca. Palaeogeographic reconstructions suggest that these areas lay within 5° north and south of an Ordovician equator and so provide data for further prediction of possible rich hydrocarbon source areas.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ85015

© CSIRO 1986

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