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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
1Manuscript received June 19, 1995; revised manuscript received
February 3, 1997; final acceptance September 11, 1997.
2JK Resources Pty Ltd, P.O. Box 520, Mitcham, SA 5062, Australia;
e-mail: [email protected].
3CSIRO Division of Petroleum Resources and Australian Petroleum
Cooperative Research Centre (APCRC), P.O. Box 136, North Ryde, NSW 2113,
Australia.
4National Centre of Petroleum Geology and Geophysics and
Australian Petroleum Cooperative Research Centre (APCRC), P.O. Box 498,
Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.
We thank G. B. Hatcher for analytical assistance and CRA Exploration
for permission to publish. We are grateful for the constructive reviews
of A. R. Scott, R. E. Summons, and W. A. Young.
Abstract
This study emphasizes the high quality of Middle Proterozoic source
rocks for petroleum exploration in northern Australia. The main problem
is finding traps that can preserve hydrocarbons over the long periods of
time since the rocks became charged with hydrocarbons.
The Velkerri Formation (~1.43 Ga) in northern Australia is one of the
organically richest Pro terozoic successions in Australia and over the
last 10 yr has been a target for oil exploration. This formation is predominantly
a glauconitic marine shale deposited in restricted to anoxic conditions
in a deep-water pro-delta slope to basin environment. The Velkerri Formation
is composed of superimposed sediment couplets made up of laminated black
organic-rich mud shales [total organic carbon (TOC) ~4-6%] and laminated
gray-green organically lean mud shales (TOC <2%). The couplets stack
at scales ranging from centimeters to meters. Of particular interest are
three black organic-rich mud shales in the middle Velkerri Member, tens
of meters thick and correlatable over much of the drilled area of the basin.
Their high organic contents reflect changes in organic productivity vs.
the rate of sediment supply, and not fluctuating oxygen levels in the bottom
waters or changes in water depth. Extractability and Rock-Eval data show
more efficient expulsion of hydrocarbons from the upper two of the three
organic-rich units in the middle Velkerri. Evidence also exists for local,
intraformational migration of hydrocarbons into siltstone layers. Nevertheless,
the middle Velkerri has very low permeability and porosity, and still retains
a significant fraction of its generated hydrocarbons, especially in the
lower portions of the middle Velkerri where a volcanogenic provenance led
to the early blocking of pore throats by clay diagenesis during early burial.
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