Surat Basin
The Surat Basin is a geological basin in eastern Australia. It is part of the Great Artesian Basin drainage basin of Australia. The Surat Basin extends across an area of 270,000 square kilometres and the southern third of the basin occupies a large part of northern New South Wales, the remainder is in Queensland. It comprises Jurassic through to Cretaceous aged sediments derived from Triassic and Permian arc rocks of the Hunter-Bowen orogeny. Towns situated above the basin, once dominated by agriculture, are experiencing a boom as mines and infrastructure in the area are expanded.[1]
Formation
The Surat Basin is an intracratonic basin that covers a sizeable section of New South Wales and southern Queensland. It was formed by fluvial sedimentation of an intracratonic area which underwent sediment sag-loading in the Jurassic to Cretaceous.
Stratigraphy
This section needs expansion with: The stratigraphy chapter does not list the stratigraphy of the basin, with an important fossiliferous formation as the Griman Creek Formation, that is unacceptable. You can help by adding to it. (March 2020) |
The western central parts of the Surat Basin unconformably overlies the Palaeozoic igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary rocks of the Lachlan Fold Belt.
In the east and northern parts of Queensland it unconformably overlies the sedimentary basin rocks of the Hunter-Bowen Orogen. The Surat Basin overlies parts of the Bowen Basin in southern Queensland,[2] and overlies the Gunnedah Basin in central New South Wales.
Palaeozoic basement highs mark the western and eastern boundaries of the Surat Basin. The Nebine Ridge delineates the boundary between the Surat Basin and the Eromanga Basin to the west. The Nebine Ridge is well developed in Queensland and gravity data indicate that the southern extension of the ridge into northern New South Wales is terminated by cross faulting. In Queensland the Kumbarilla Ridge divides the Surat Basin from the Clarence-Moreton Basin to the east.
The mostly flat-lying basin has a maximum thickness of about 2,500 m in Queensland,[3] with up to 1,800 m preserved in New South Wales.
The basin hosts the fossiliferous early to middle Cenomanian Griman Creek Formation.
Economic geology
More than 100 hydrocarbon accumulations have been found in the basin however only half are producing.[3] The Surat Basin is not very important a target for oil as the source rocks have not generally been subjected to suitable conditions to evolve oil. There is some slight natural gas potential. Jurassic coal seams have been worked and explored in the Queensland portions of the basin.
Mines
The basin has a number of mines such as Wilkie Creek Mine where Peabody Energy Australia mines and then exports coal.[4]
Coal seam methane
The basin has a number of coal seam methane fields - also known as coalbed methane - developing in the region. These fields presently supply the domestic market, including a number of power stations and the Roma to Brisbane Pipeline. A number of gas companies have recently announced plans to develop liquified natural gas plants in or around Gladstone to export Surat Basin gas to international markets. The Port of Gladstone is undergoing a A$3.5 billion expansion to accommodate expected demands.[1] In 2010, two energy companies confirmed their mines have the potential to affect groundwater levels.[5]
See also
References
- ^ a b Terry Ryder (8 April 2010). "Surat Basin to become one of the nation's boom economies". The Australian. News Limited. Retrieved 11 October 2010.
- ^ "Geoscience Australia - Bowen Basin". Commonwealth of Australia. 1 July 2008. Archived from the original on 26 November 2009. Retrieved 22 September 2009.
- ^ a b "Geoscience Australia - Surat Basin". Commonwealth of Australia. 1 July 2008. Archived from the original on 7 February 2009. Retrieved 22 September 2009.
- ^ Queensland's World-class Coals: Mine Production and Developments December 2005. Retrieved 19 April 2007.
- ^ Rosanne Barrett (9 October 2010). "Coal-seam gas may cause Underground water level may fall, gas firms admit". The Australian. News Limited. Retrieved 11 October 2010.