Abstract

The Early Palaeozoic eastern Warburton Basin unconformably underlies the Cooper and Eromanga Basins. Four seismic sequence sets (I−IV) are interpreted. Among them, sequence set II is subdivided into four Cambro-Ordovician depositional sequences. Sequence 1, the oldest, is a shallow shelf deposit that occurs only in the Gidgealpa area. Sequences 2 and 3 were deposited in a wider area; from west to east, environments varyied from deep siliciclastic ramp, carbonate inner-shelf, peritidal, shelf edge, and slope-to-basin. Their seismic reflection configurations are high-amplitude, regionally parallel-continuous, layered patterns, locally mounded geometry, as well as divergent-fill patterns. Sequence 4, the youngest, was deposited in a mixed siliciclastic and carbonate, storm-dominate shelf. Its seismic reflection configurations are moderate amplitude, parallel-layered patterns, decreasing in amplitude upwards.Boundaries between the four sequences generated good secondary porosity in the carbonates. Karst development is interpreted to have generated much of this porosity in shelf and peritidal carbonates, and carbonate build-ups. Shoal-water sandy limestone and calcareous sandstone of Sequence 4 may be other potential reservoir rocks. Potential source rocks comprise mudstone and shale of slope and basin lithofacies. There are two kinds of stratigraphic trap. One is in Sequences 2 and 3, associated with high-relief carbonate build-ups encased in lagoonal mudstone and shelf edge sealed by transgressive siltstone and shale. The other is a transgressive marine shale enclosing porous dolostone of the karstified Sequence 1. In addition, petroleum may have migrated from Permian source rocks of the Cooper Basin to karstified carbonate reservoirs of the Warburton Basin at unconformities.

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