POLLOCK, ROSALIE M., National Centre for Petroleum Geology and Geophysics, University of Adelaide, South Australia
ABSTRACT: Sequence Stratigraphy, Biostratigraphy and Depositional Systems in the Cainozoic Gambier Basin, Southern Australia
The Gambier Basin represents one of the frontier basins in southern
Australia and forms part of a passive continental margin developed during the Jurassic to
Tertiary resulting from the separation of Australia and Antarctica. The basin comprises
Palaeocene-Eocene clastic sediments, but since the later part of the Middle Eocene, plate
reconfiguration, marine transgression and
introduction
of a warm current into southern
Australia, deposition of cool-water carbonate platforms and mounds has dominated. Sequence
stratigraphy based on regional
seismic
interpretation, detailed biostratigraphy and
depositional systems analysis is undertaken to aid
exploration
in the basin.
The Palaeocene-Eocene clastic succession has been recognised as a series of stacked,
coarsening-upward deltaic parasequences, while several high-resolution sequences have been
recognised in the Middle Eocene to Middle Miocene, carbonate section, as part of an
overall regressive-transgressive-regressive cycle. The carbonate sequence shows clinoform
geometries on the outer shelf, punctuated by many incision events. Large submarine canyons
are evident on the
seismic
, probably produced by relative falls in sea level. Mounded
structures, similar to those biogenic carbonate buildups observed, on the Eucla Platform
over 1000km to the west, are thought to have developed during transgressive events.
Regional depositional environments, different rates of subsidence and sea level
fluctuations, are the prime factors controlling the sediment buildup and consequently the
development of the whole basin. The depositional model generated from this study will
assist with development of play concepts for
exploration
in the Gambier and other southern
Australian basins.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90909©2000 AAPG Foundation Grants-in-Aid