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Journal of the Australian Petroleum Production & Exploration Association (APPEA)
RESEARCH ARTICLE

GEOLOGIC EVOLUTION AND HYDROCARBON HABITAT GIPPSLAND BASIN

J. Barry Hocking

The APPEA Journal 12(1) 132 - 137
Published: 1972

Abstract

The Gippsland Basin of southeastern Australia is a post-orogenic, continental margin type of basin of Upper Cretaceous-Cainozoic age.

Gippsland Basin evolution can be traced back to the establishment of the Strzelecki Basin, or ancestral Gippsland Basin, during the Jurassic. Gippsland Basin sedimentation commenced in the middle to late Cretaceous and is represented as a gross transgressive-regressive cycle consisting of the continental Latrobe Valley Group (Upper Cretaceous to Eocene or Miocene), the marine Seaspray Group (Oligocene to Pliocene or Recent), and finally the continental Sale Group (Pliocene to Recent).

The hydrocarbons of the Gippsland Shelf petroleum province were generated within the Latrobe Valley Group and are trapped in porous fluvio-deltaic sandstones of the Latrobe. At Lakes Entrance, however, oil and gas are present in a marginal sandy facies of the Lakes Entrance Formation (Seaspray Group).

The buried Strzelecki Basin has played a fundamental role in the development and distribution of the Cainozoic fold belt in the northern Gippsland Basin. The Gippsland Shelf hydrocarbon accumulations fall within this belt and are primarily structural traps. The apparent lack of structural accumulations onshore in Gippsland is largely due to a Plio-Pleistocene episode of cratonic uplift that was accompanied by basinward tilting of structures and meteoric water influx.

The non-commercial Lakes Entrance field, located on the stable northern flank of the basin, is a stratigraphic trap and may serve as a guide for future exploration.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ71022

© CSIRO 1972

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