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Journal of the Australian Petroleum Production & Exploration Association (APPEA)
RESEARCH ARTICLE

THE CAMBRIAN PALAEOGEOGRAPHY OF AUSTRALIA AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR PETROLEUM EXPLORATION

Peter J. Cook

The APPEA Journal 22(1) 42 - 64
Published: 1982

Abstract

As part of a larger project to re-evaluate the petroleum potential of Australia, it was considered necessary to produce a series of Cambrian palaeogeographic maps. This required the compilation and correlation of a large number of stratigraphic columns, the delineation of sedimentologlcally-significant time intervals, the production of data maps for these same time intervals, and the development of a Cambrian 'tectonic' map. This palaeogeographic study was not undertaken to establish precise exploration targets. However, it does provide new information on where many of the essential components are, what age they are, and why they are there, and as such is a valuable tool in the overall exploration and resource evaluation strategy.

The six palaeogeographic maps finally produced illustrate events involving continental drift, tectonics, and climatic and sea-level variations, over a period of 70 million years. Together, these events produced marked changes in the palaeogeography and depositional environments, which in turn profoundly affected the type and distribution of sediments being deposited on and around the palaeo-continent during the Cambrian. Using the palaeogeographic maps and the data accumulated for the project, it is possible to demonstrate that organic-rich sediments, with the potential to be petroleum source rocks, were relatively common during the Cambrian, especially on the eastern cratonic margin during the Lower Cambrian (Officer and possible Amadeus Basins) and the Middle Cambrian (Georgina Basin). There may also be some suitable petroleum source rocks in the Ord Basin. Limestones and dolomites, some of which may constitute potential reservoir rocks, were deposited in a number of Cambrian intracratonic basins (Amadeus, Georgina Basins) and on the shelf (Cooper Basin). Cambrian sandstones in Australia are commonly poor reservoir rocks, but where they have been subjected to shore-line or shelf 'clean-up', for example during the Middle and Upper Cambrian on the northwest side of the craton (Bonaparte Gulf Basin), there may be some potential reservoir rocks. Some sandstones may also be present on the south side of the Cooper Basin. Fine-grained impermeable sediments (potential cap rocks) were deposited throughout the Cambrian, but evaporites were most common during the Early and lower Middle Cambrian. Synsedimentary tectonics may have produced structural and stratigraphlc traps, and a major phase of karsting occurred in the Cambrian. Therefore, the Cambrian of Australia is believed to have many of the prerequisites for the generation, migration and entrapment of hydrocarbons. Especially favourable areas for these features may lie to the southeast of the Georgina Basin and in the offshore region northwest of the Ord and Bonaparte Gulf Basins.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ81003

© CSIRO 1982

Committee on Publication Ethics


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