--> Basin Architecture From Gravity Gradiometer and Seismic Data, South-Western Margin of the Fitzroy Trough and Gregory Sub-Basin, Canning Basin, Western Australia

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Basin Architecture From Gravity Gradiometer and Seismic Data, South-Western Margin of the Fitzroy Trough and Gregory Sub-Basin, Canning Basin, Western Australia

Abstract

The Canning Basin is an under-explored frontier basin. Most of the available information about the subsurface structure is from sparse ‘vintage’ 2D seismic lines. Buru Energy has acquired a FALCON® Airborne Gravity Gradiometer (AGG) survey (38,800 km2) over the SW margin of the Fitzroy Trough and Gregory Sub-basin, also covering parts of the Jurgarra and Barbwire terraces, and the Broome and Crossland platforms. A new workflow was used to reinterpret ‘vintage’ seismic data with the aid of the AGG data to produce a geological model. An initial seismic interpretation was performed by Buru Energy. The following integrated intepretation of the AGG, seismic, magnetic, well, and other available data allowed for an improved understanding of sub-surface structures and stratigraphy. A basement structure map, two intra-sedimentary structure maps and a distribution map of interpreted gravity sources, many of which are carbonate reservoirs, were produced. The interpretation of 16 seismic traverses with the assistance of AGG data and validation through 2.5D gravity modelling is a key component to this interpretation workflow. Based on these results a 3D geological model was constructed in SKUA-GOCAD and validated by forward modelling and heterogeneous property inversion in VPmg. Overlying the basement is a sequence of Ordovician carbonate and shale bearing formations of relatively constant thickness and clear definition in the AGG data. The internal structure of the platforms and terraces is well-defined due to low GDD values in the fault heave area of these formations. In the northern part of the survey, thickness variations in the Ordovician-Silurian Carribuddy Group are linked to large listric growth faults, which form the WNW Fitzroy Trough trend. These faults, less important in the south, predate the Devonian to Carboniferous faults of the NW Gregory Sub-basin trend. Devonian carbonates have a pronounced appearance in the AGG data. Formed during the Devonian Pillara Extension they define the Gregory Sub-basin. The Pillara Extension was near parallel to the Ordovician-Silurian listric faults, which reactivated as transfer faults. Deposition of the Devono-Carboniferous Fairfield Group was followed by the Meda Transpression. After deposition of Permian sequences in the Gregory Sub-basin and Fitzroy Trough, the Triassic Fitzroy Transpression inverted particularly the WNW trending growth faults in the north and the major faults between platforms terraces and troughs.