Abstract

Analysis of seismic data from the Bowen and Surat Basins has yielded valuable information on the Permian and Triassic evolution of eastern Australia. When combined with seismic data from the Clarence-Moreton and Maryborough Basins, a new understanding of the post-Triassic evolution of the region can be gained, with widespread implications for other eastern Australian basins.The Early Permian-Middle Triassic Bowen-Sydney Basin is a foreland basin system extending 2000 km in preserved section from Nowra in the south to Collinsville in the north. Permian outcrops as far north as Cape York were probably part of the same system prior to deformation and erosion. The basins in the Bowen-Sydney system were linked by similar structural and stratigraphic patterns controlled by a magmatic arc to the east. The Esk Trough and associated remnant basins east of the Taroom Trough were part of the Middle Triassic foreland sequence. The structural style in the system is dominated by thrusting from the east. An Early Triassic deformation is shown to be the most important, rather than the previously believed Middle Triassic event.The overlying Jurassic-Cretaceous foreland system, which included the Surat, Maryborough and Clarence-Moreton Basins, were once joined behind another magmatic arc, east of the Triassic arc position. A major mid-Cretaceous deformation is documented which fragmented the Jurassic-Cretaceous foreland basin into a number of remnant basins prior to the opening of the Tasman Sea in the Cenomanian. The dominant structural style is again thrusting from the east. Given the severity of the deformation, its effects are expected to be present in continental margin basins around Australia.

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