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The Morum Sub-basin Petroleum System, Otway Basin, South Australia*
By
Peter J. Boult1,4, David M. McKirdy5, Jane E. Blevin2,
Roar Heggeland3, Simon C. Lang1 and
Don R. Vinall4
Search and Discovery Article #10095 (2006)
Posted January 28, 2006
*Modified from extended abstract for presentation at AAPG International Conference, Paris, France, September 11-14, 2005
1Australian School of Petroleum, SA 5005, Australia ([email protected])
2Geoscience Australia, GPO Box 378, Canberra, ACT, 2601, Australia
3Statoil ASA, N-4035 Stavanger, Norway
4PIRSA, 101 Grenfell St, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia
5School of Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia
Abstract
Seismic data are
extremely sparse, and not a single well has been drilled into the 6 second-TWT-deep,
primarily Late Cretaceous Morum Sub-basin (250 x 150 km), which lies beyond the
shelf edge at the northern end of the Otway Basin. Beach strandings of heavy
asphaltite (49° API) containing Mesozoic marine biomarkers are common along a
section of the nearby
coast
. Here, the summer Bonney Upwelling is supplied by
cold waters of the northwardflowing, deep-water Flinders Current. The upwelling
appears to be focused upward onto the shelf by canyons incised in the
continental slope, particularly those on the southern, upstream side of a slope
headland caused by large-scale shelf collapse. Near the base of the slope one
canyon cuts as deeply as 1.6 km through the stratigraphic succession into an
interpreted toe-thrust inversion structure that may contain potential Upper
Albian marine source rocks. Numerous sea-surface anomalies have been detected
over this canyon using Synthetic Aperture Radar images. Potential gas chimneys,
diapric structures, and amplitude anomalies are interpreted on a regional, deep
seismic line that transects the canyon. We postulate that hydrocarbons are
migrating upward along faults to the distal canyon floor where they form tar
mats (asphaltite), while lighter hydrocarbons escape to the sea surface.
The tar mats are then dislodged from the seabed and swept up the canyon by bottom currents driven by the summer upwelling. Tar balls entrained in the upwelling water are spread across the shelf and eventually moved ashore as beach strandings by winter storms that come in from the west.
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Framework and BackgroundThe
Morum Sub-basin (area = 40,000 km2) lies beyond the shelf
edge off the southeastern
Geochemical analysis undertaken on an oil show within Upper Albian–Cenomanian(?)
rocks from the Crayfish-A1 well (Figure 1),
which is close to the edge of this depocenter, suggest its origin is an
anoxic marine source rock, and aromatic Seismic data are extremely sparse in the deep-water Otway Basin. Nevertheless, trend analysis of potential field data (Figure 1) and calculation of extension rates by Palmowski (2004) of two key, deep seismic lines across the basin (Figure 2) have shown that the Morum Sub-basin is tectonically quite distinct from the Nelson Sub-basin, which lies to the south of the Discovery Bay High. Palmowski (2004) concluded that extension rates in the Nelson Sub-basin peaked during the Turonian and tailed off from there onward— behaviour which is typical of passive margins around the world. However, for the Morum Sub-basin he concluded that extension rates peaked earlier than the Turonian. Given the greater thickness of sediments in the Morum Sub-basin, we estimate that at least some of this was deposited prior to the Turonian. Due to the existence of known Albian marine rocks in the next basin to the northwest of this area and the knowledge that the southern margin of Australia ‘unzipped’ itself from Antarctica in a west to east direction, we postulate that the Upper Albian sediments of the Morum Sub-basin are possibly marine and may contain source rocks that are age equivalent to the prolific world-wide Albian OAE. Thus
the potential
The
limited extent of the interpreted marine Albian source rocks is also
consistent with the geographic The
most significant attribute of these asphaltites is that they are heavier
than seawater and are thus moved along the sea floor by saltation,
unlike the lighter bitumen, which is also found on these beaches. The
latter has been linked back to Indonesian source rocks and is assumed to
have drifted around the west The
following scenario may explain the local Near
the base of the slope, in the vicinity of the large-scale shelf
collapse, one canyon cuts as deeply as 1.6 km through the stratigraphic
succession into the toe-thrust inversion structure that may contain the
interpreted Upper Albian marine source rocks. Numerous sea-surface
anomalies have been detected over this canyon using Synthetic Aperture
Radar (SAR) images (Figure 3). Potential gas
chimneys (Figure 6), diapric structures, and
amplitude anomalies are also interpreted on a regional, deep seismic
line that transects the canyon. We postulate that the maturation of
hydrocarbons is contributing to the generation of
ReferencesEdwards D., McKirdy, D.M., and Summons, R.E., 1998, Enigmatic asphaltites from the southern Australian margin: molecular and carbon isotopic composition: Petroleum Exploration Society Australia Journal, v. 26, p. 106–129. Krassay, A.A, Cathro, D.L., and Ryan, D.J., 2004, A regional tectonotratigraphic framework for the Otway Basin, in Boult, P.J., Johns, D.R. and Lang S.C., eds., Proceedings of Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia, Eastern Australasian Basins Symposium II, p. 97–116. Middleton, J.F., and Platov, G., 2003, The mean summertime circulation along Australia’s southern shelves: a numerical study: Journal of Physical Oceanography, v. 33, p. 2270– 2287. Palmowski, D., Hill, K.C., and Hoffman, N., 2004, Structural-stratigraphic styles and evolution of the offshore Otway Basin – a structural seismic analysis, in Boult, P.J., Johns, D.R. and Lang S.C., eds., Proceedings of Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia, Eastern Australasian Basins Symposium II, p. 75–96. Smart, S. M., 1999, Asphaltites from the southern Australian Margin: Submarine oil seeps or maritime artefacts?: Unpublished Honours thesis, The National Centre for Petroleum Geology and Geophysics at the University of Adelaide, South Australia. Sprigg, R.C., and Woolley, J.B., 1963, Coastal bitumen in southern Australia, with special reference to observations at Geltwood Beach, southeast South Australia: Transactions of the Royal Society Australia, v. 88, p. 67–103. Summons, R.E., Logan, G.A., Edwards, D.S., Boreham, C.J., Bradshaw, M.T., Blevin, J.E., Totterdell, J.M., and Zumberge, J.E., 2001, Geochemical analogues for Australian coastal asphaltites - search for the source rock (Abstract): AAPG Bulletin, v. 85 (no. 13 – Supplement). |
