Geoscience Visual Presentation G3: The Cretaceous-Cenozoic volcanic record of the Gippsland Basin: origin, nature and significance for the energy transition
Simon Holford A *A School of Physics, Chemistry and Earth Sciences, University of Adelaide, SA, Australia.
The APPEA Journal 63 - https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ22415
Published: 2 June 2023
Abstract
Visual Presentation G3
Mafic volcanic rocks, typically basalts of mainly late Cretaceous age, have been intersected by Gippsland Basin wells. Intersections of volcanic rocks primarily occur along the basin-bounding Rosedale Fault System in the northern part of the basin, where they exhibit a close spatial correspondence with high-CO2 content gas accumulations. Though petrographic data indicates that the basalts have been variably altered to clays and carbonates, they provide the top seals to numerous hydrocarbon accumulations, most notably at the Kipper Field. Despite the widespread distribution of these volcanics and their relevance to petroleum systems, they have received only sporadic attention over the past few decades. Here we combine petrophysical, geomechanical, geophysical and geochemical datasets to elucidate the origin of the volcanic record of the Gippsland Basin, and to evaluate their potential role in the decarbonisation of the basin, for example through providing opportunities for intra and sub-basaltic storage of CO2.
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Keywords: carbon capture and storage, igneous intrusions, sedimentary basins, volcanism.
Professor Simon Holford is South Australian State Chair of Petroleum Geoscience in the Discipline of Earth Sciences, University of Adelaide. Simon has published approximately 130 papers on the prospectivity and tectonics of rifted margins, petroleum geomechanics and magmatism in basins. Simon has won multiple awards, including Best Paper prizes at APPEA 2012 and AEGC 2019, Best Extended Abstract at APPEA 2021 and the Geological Society of Australia’s Walter Howchin and ES Hills medals. |