Abstract

New 2D seismic data acquired by Geoscience Australia in the northern Houtman Sub-basin of the Perth Basin provides important information on the prospectivity of this frontier area. To date, lack of quality seismic data and limited geological understanding have led to the perception that the hydrocarbon potential of the area is very low. However, interpretation of newly collected data suggests that the northern Houtman depocentre contains up to 15 km of pre-breakup sediments comprised of Permian, Triassic and Jurassic successions, which potentially contain multiple source rock, reservoir and seal intervals. The Permian syn-rift succession is confined to a series of large half-graben that are controlled by basement-involved faults separating the Houtman depocentre from the Bernier Platform. This succession is up to 10 km thick and is mapped throughout the inboard part of the new seismic grid. A prominent unconformity at the top of the Permian syn-rift sequence is overlain by a thick (up to 1800 m) and regionally extensive seismic sequence interpreted as the Lower Triassic Kockatea Shale. The thickness of the overlying Triassic succession ranges from approximately 1 km in the inboard part of the basin to up to 5 km further outboard. The Jurassic succession is thickest (up to 4 km) in the outboard part of the basin and is interpreted to contain sequences corresponding to the Cattamarra, Cadda and Yarragadee formations. Our study integrates new results from regional mapping, geophysical modelling and petroleum systems analysis, which enables a more accurate prospectivity assessment of this frontier basin.

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