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

HYDRODYNAMIC ANALYSIS OF FLOW SYSTEMS AND FAULT SEAL INTEGRITY IN THE NORTH WEST SHELF OF AUSTRALIA

C.J. Otto, J.R. Underschultz, A.L. Hennig and V.J. Roy

The APPEA Journal 41(1) 347 - 365
Published: 2001

Abstract

The North West Shelf hydrodynamics pressure database, developed as part of the North West Shelf Hydrodynamics Project, currently contains 7,780 pressure data points and hundreds of stress, temperature and water salinity data. All data have been ranked using a newly developed quality-control system. Equivalent hydraulic head mapping (fluid potential energy analysis) to interpret fluid migration pathways, hydraulic barriers and conduits was shown to be a valid technique despite lateral and vertical fluid density variations. Pressureelevation analysis identified six major aquifer systems (hydrostratigraphic units) in the regional North West Shelf. On a regional scale, the general flow direction in the North West Shelf is from the basins’ depocentres towards the onshore and upwards to the shallower aquifer systems. Compaction-driven flow is the main driving force for fluid flow in the North West Shelf. Overpressured compartments in the Carnarvon Basin are leaking, not hydraulically isolated from the regional flow field, thus generating their own local flow system. In general, fluid flow within the hydrostratigraphic units is parallel to the trend of major fault systems, which act as barriers in the horizontal plane of the aquifer. However, local-scale hydrodynamic analysis has shown that faults can act as fluid conduits between hydrostratigraphic units providing vertical hydraulic communication (e.g. Mardie to Barrow aquifers). Case studies in the Harriet, Gorgon, Griffin, Goodwyn and Vulcan areas have shown that the migration paths can be very complex due to the hydraulic nature of the faults and the presence of overpressured compartments

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ00016

© CSIRO 2001

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