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The thermal history of the Bowen Basin, Queensland, Australia: vitrinite reflectance and clay mineralogy of Late Permian coal measures
The thermal history of the Bowen Basin (Queensland, Australia) has been investigated using vitrinite reflectance data and clay mineralogy. Vitrinite reflectance data combined with a study of clay mineral reactions indicates that the maximum temperatures which induced organic maturation of the Bowen...
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Published in: | Tectonophysics 2000-08, Vol.323 (1), p.105-129 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The thermal history of the Bowen Basin (Queensland, Australia) has been investigated using vitrinite reflectance data and clay mineralogy. Vitrinite reflectance data combined with a study of clay mineral reactions indicates that the maximum temperatures which induced organic maturation of the Bowen Basin coals and extensive clay mineralisation are not related to deep burial metamorphism during the latest Middle Triassic–earliest Late Triassic as previously believed. The results of the present study indicate that the development of a zone of high heat flow in the latest Late Triassic had a major control on the thermal history of the Bowen Basin. High palaeogeothermal gradients estimated in the northern Bowen Basin are interpreted to result from convective heat transfer during a hydrothermal event. Variable heat distributions due to localised fracture-enhanced permeable zones acting as hot reservoirs in the deeper part of the basin may have been responsible for some significant local thermal anomalies in the lower coal measures. The estimated palaeogeothermal gradients in the southern Bowen Basin also indicate high heat flow in the lower sections of the stratigraphy. Sections in the southern Bowen Basin, however, are believed to reflect a rock dominated semi-closed system with low water/rock ratio, where rocks are impervious to circulating fluids and thus heat transfer may have occurred by conduction. The correlation between vitrinite reflectance and clay mineralogy shows a delay in illitisation reaction relative to organic maturity for many illite/smectite (I/S) mixed-layer clays in the northern Bowen Basin. This phenomenon can be explained as a result of insufficient time for the completion of mineral reactions and a variable potassium supply in relatively impermeable rocks. The relationship between I/S expandability and vitrinite reflectance for the Bowen Basin data compared to basins with known tectonic regimes suggests a thermal history in a rift setting for the Bowen Basin. The effect of thin igneous intrusions on clay mineral reactions is very limited. Intensive illitisation due to heating of intrusions can only be observed in narrow zones immediately adjacent to intrusive bodies. This further demonstrates that mineral reactions are too slow to record the effect of extremely short heating duration, in contrast to organic maturity indicators. These differences between mineral and organic parameters aid in the identification of local contact metamorphic |
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ISSN: | 0040-1951 1879-3266 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0040-1951(00)00098-6 |