Abstract

The northern Bonaparte Basin and the Arafura-Money Shoal Basins lie along Australia's offshore northern margin and offer significantly different exploration prospects resulting from their differing tectonic and burial histories. The Arafura Basin is dominated by a deep, faulted and folded, NW-SE orientated Palaeozoic graben overlain by the relatively flat-lying Jurassic-Tertiary Money Shoal Basin. The north-eastern Bonaparte Basin is dominated by the deep NE-SW orientated Malita Graben with mainly Jurassic to Recent basin-fill.A variety of potential structural and stratigraphic traps occur in the region especially associated with the grabens. They include tilted or horst fault blocks and large compressional, drape and rollover anticlines. Some inversion and possibly interference anticlines result from late Cenozoic collision between the Australian plate and Timor and the Banda Arc.In the Arafura-Money Shoal Basins, good petroleum source rocks occur in the Cambrian, Carboniferous and Jurassic-Cretaceous sequences although maturation is biassed towards early graben development. Jurassic-Neocomian sandstones have the best reservoir potential, Carboniferous clastics offer moderate prospects, and Palaeozoic carbonates require porosity enhancement.The Malita Graben probably contains good potential Jurassic source rocks which commenced generation in the Late Cretaceous. Deep burial in the graben has decreased porosity of the Jurassic-Neocomian sandstones significantly but potential reservoirs may occur on the shallower flanks.The region is sparsely explored and no commercial discoveries exist. However, oil and gas indications are common in a variety of Palaeozoic and Mesozoic sequences and structural settings. These provide sufficient encouragement for a new round of exploration.

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