2006
DOI: 10.1071/aj05016
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Present-Day State-of-Stress of Southeast Australia

Abstract: There have been several studies, both published and unpublished, of the present-day state-of-stress of southeast Australia that address a variety of geomechanical issues related to the petroleum industry. This paper combines present-day stress data from those studies with new data to provide an overview of the present-day state-of-stress from the Otway Basin to the Gippsland Basin. This overview provides valuable baseline data for further geomechanical studies in southeast Australia and helps explain the regio… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…The present-day stress tensor in the Snapper Field is likely to be consistent with regional observations in the Gippsland Basin and suggests transitional conditions between strike-slip and reverse fault stress regimes (S Hmax D 41 MPa km À1 >> S v D 21 MPa km À1 »S hmin D 20 MPa km 1 ; Table 2) (Nelson & Hillis 2005;Nelson et al 2006;van Ruth et al 2006). The orientation of maximum horizontal stress in the Snapper Field is assumed to be »150 N, based on projection (Table 2).…”
Section: Geomechanical Modelling Of Fault Reactivationmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…The present-day stress tensor in the Snapper Field is likely to be consistent with regional observations in the Gippsland Basin and suggests transitional conditions between strike-slip and reverse fault stress regimes (S Hmax D 41 MPa km À1 >> S v D 21 MPa km À1 »S hmin D 20 MPa km 1 ; Table 2) (Nelson & Hillis 2005;Nelson et al 2006;van Ruth et al 2006). The orientation of maximum horizontal stress in the Snapper Field is assumed to be »150 N, based on projection (Table 2).…”
Section: Geomechanical Modelling Of Fault Reactivationmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…The parameters that follow form the input to modelling the ∆P for the 62 faults being considered (mostly 'branched' faults). A S Hmax , S hmin and S V of 42, 20 and 21 MPa/km, respectively, are used based on Nelson et al (2006). A pore pressure of 10 MPa/km is used to calculate the effective stress.…”
Section: Fault Reactivation Modellingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…South Australia; Hillis et al 1995) to c. 1378N in the eastern Otway Basin (i.e. Victoria; Nelson et al 2006;Vidal-Gilbert et al 2010;Fig. 2).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using an extensive dataset of stress measurements, based mainly on wells from the Port Campbell Embayment and Shipwreck Trough, Nelson et al (2006) concluded that the present-day stress regime is strike-slip (approaching reverse). Leak-off pressure test and extended leak-off pressure test data reported by Nelson et al (2006) indicate an increase in the magnitude of S Hmin from the western to eastern Otway Basin, indicating that the eastern part of the basin is approaching a reverse stress regime (Nelson et al 2006).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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