Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/78804
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Type: Journal article
Title: Reassessing the in-situ stress regimes of Australia's petroleum basins
Author: King, R.
Holford, S.
Hillis, R.
Tuitt, A.
Swierczek, E.
Backe, G.
Tassone, D.
Tingay, M.
Citation: Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration Association (APPEA) Journal, 2012; 52(1):415-426
Publisher: Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration Association
Issue Date: 2012
ISSN: 1326-4966
Abstract: <jats:p> Previous in-situ stress studies across many of Australia’s petroleum basins demonstrate normal fault and strike-slip fault stress regimes, despite the sedimentary successions demonstrating evidence for widespread Miocene-to-Recent reverse faulting. Seismic and outcrop data demonstrate late Miocene-to-Recent reverse or reverse-oblique faulting in the Otway and Gippsland basins. In the Otway Basin, a series of approximately northeast to southwest trending anticlines related to reverse-reactivation of deep syn-rift normal faults, resulting in the deformation of Cenozoic post-rift sediments are observed. Numerous examples of late Miocene-to-Recent reverse faulting in the offshore Gippsland Basin have also been observed, with contractional reactivation of previously normal faults during these times partially responsible for the formation of anticlinal hydrocarbon traps that host the Barracouta, Seahorse and Flying Fish hydrocarbon fields, adjacent to the Rosedale Fault System. A new method for interpreting leak-off test data demonstrates that the in-situ stress data from parts of the Otway and Gippsland basins can be reinterpreted to yield reverse fault stress regimes, consistent with the present-day tectonic setting of the basins. This reinterpretation has significant implications for petroleum exploration and development in the basins. In the Otway and Gippsland basins, wells drilled parallel to the orientation of the maximum horizontal stress (Ï H) represent the safest drilling directions for both borehole stability and fluid losses. Faults and fractures, striking northeast to southwest, previously believed to be at low risk of reactivation in a normal fault or strike-slip fault stress regime are now considered to be at high risk in the reinterpreted reverse fault stress regime. </jats:p>
DOI: 10.1071/aj11033
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj11033
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest
Australian School of Petroleum publications

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