THE REGIONAL GEOLOGY OF THE BONAPARTE GULF TIMOR SEA AREA
The APPEA Journal
14(1) 77 - 84
Published: 1974
Abstract
The present structural configuration of the Bonaparte Gulf-Timor Sea area is essentially the result of Mesozoic and Tertiary fragmentation of a once relatively simple Permo-Triassic Basin. A northwest-southeast Palaeozoic structural grain in the southeastern portion of the area resulted from early Palaeozoic faulting, possibly tied to aborted rift development. This faulting effectively controlled sedimentation throughout the Phanerozoic. Pronounced northeast-southwest Jurassic to Tertiary structural trends dominate the central and northern area, paralleling the present edge of the continental shelf and swinging south southwest into the northern extension of the Browse Basin. Post-Palaeozoic epeirogenies which had the greatest effect on the regional structural pattern occurred in the mid-Jurassic, Early Cretaceous, within the Eocene and in the Plio-Pleistocene.The Kimberley and Sturt Blocks flanking the basin to the south and east constituted the most important source areas for clastic sedimentation throughout the Phanerozoic. Periodic contributions during the Mesozoic were derived from a postulated source to the northwest in the vicinity of the present-day Timor Trough.
The maximum thickness of Phanerozoic sediments present within the Bonaparte Gulf-Timor Sea area exceeds 50,000 ft (15,000 m). Early Palaeozoic to Carboniferous evaporites, carbonates and clastics are unconformably overlain by a thick sequence of Permian deltaic sediments in the southeastern Bonaparte Gulf Basin. This is succeeded by a Triassic to Middle Jurassic transgressive-regressive clastic sequence, grading northwestward to marginal marine and marine clastics and carbonates. The Permian to mid-Jurassic sediments are unconformably overlain by Upper Jurassic sands and shales, mainly fluvial in the southeast and north, becoming more marine westward. These clastics are everywhere succeeded by a monotonous sequence of Cretaceous shales and shaly limestones followed by a generally north to northwesterly thickening wedge of Tertiary carbonates and minor elastics.
Hydrocarbon shows have been noted offshore in rocks of Carboniferous, Permian, Late Jurassic, Late Cretaceous and Eocene age. Porous clastics in conjunction with thick and laterally-extensive, organically-rich shales are present within the Palaeozoic and Mesozoic sequences. These sediments, in association with fault- and diapir-related anomalies and stratigraphic plays, combine to make certain provinces of the Bonaparte Gulf-Timor Sea area prospective in the search for viable oil and gas reserves.
https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ73010
© CSIRO 1974