Abstract

Several wells drilled along the fault-terraced eastern margin of the Barrow Sub-basin of the Australian North West Shelf have shed light on the pattern of Callovian to Tithonian sedimentation in the area. Much of this section has historically been interpreted as a product of deep marine depositional environments.Sandstone reservoirs cored in Linda–1/ST1, Linda–2 (both Wanaea spectabilis b age) and Denver–1/ST1 (Rigaudella aemula age) exhibit coarsening-upward cycles typical of marine parasequences, and possess sharp, erosive lower contacts with underlying claystone. In the case of Denver–1/ST1, the sandstones are heavily bioturbated with a distinct shallow marine trace fossil assemblage. Burrows are less evident in the sandstones from the Linda wells, although several thin bioturbated horizons—also with shallow marine trace fossils—are encountered. Similar patterns of shallow marine deposition are observed in previously drilled wells within the study area, and evidence of pedogenesis is found in core from Georgette–1 (R. aemula age), suggesting that exposure occurred on some of the higher fault terraces during low-stand conditions in the Middle to Late Jurassic.Further to the west, deepwater submarine fan sediments, deposited during low-stands, have been recognised. A range of time equivalent low-stand deposits—which are spatially and genetically exclusive— therefore exists within the sub-basin. Indeed such a spectrum should be expected in complex and tectonically active areas such as the Jurassic Barrow Sub-basin.The recognition of shallow marine deposits in the area has major implications with respect to the location and geometry of reservoir sandstones. The low-stand shoreface model, as opposed to the deep marine turbidite model, leads to the prediction of sandstone deposition aligned roughly parallel—rather than perpendicular— to the palaeo-shoreline and the potential for deeperwater sandstones further downdip.

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