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The Geology of the Murray Basin, Southeastern Australia

<p>The Murray Basin extends over 300 000 km of inland southeastern Australia, is flanked by subdued mountain ranges, and forms a low-lying saucer-shaped basin with thin flat-lying Cainozoic sediments. Over the past 100 years, the Murray Basin has become one of the most important agricultural regions in Australia. Unfortunately it is also a closed groundwater basin, which consists of a thin sequence of sediments containing a number of aquifer systems, with little capacity to absorb additional recharge. Irrigation and clearing of natural vegetation have increased recharge to these aquifer systems. Resultant rising groundwater levels and discharge of saline water into the landscapes and river systems of the basin, have created salinity problems that threaten to have an increasingly adverse impact on both the regional economy and natural environments. Many of the reasons for salinisation lie in the subsurface geology, and can be related to the development of the structural and stratigraphic framework of the basin over the past 60 Ma. Knowledge of these is a prerequisite to understanding hydrogeological systems and processes contributing to the salinity problem. This document summarises the geology of the Murray Basin.

<p>Beneath the Murray Basin, geophysical and borehole evidence indicates that folded and partly metamorphosed Proterozoic and Lower Palaeozoic basement is block-faulted, and that the Cainozoic sequence is locally underlain by poorly defined infrabasins preserved in graben-like troughs. These contain thick sequences of Devonian to Lower Carboniferous sedimentary rock and discontinuous, erosional remnants of Upper Carboniferous, Permian, Triassic and Cretaceous platform-cover sediments.

<p>The Cainozoic succession of the Murray Basin forms an extensive blanket of sediment, with a maximum thickness of about 600 m preserved in the deeper, central-western parts of the basin. A subsidiary depocentre with over 400 m of sediment underlies the central-west Riverine Plain, but in most northern, eastern, and southern parts of the basin the sediment succession is generally less than 200-300 m thick, and could be more accurately described as forming a thin platform-cover succession rather than a true basinal sequence. Within the Tertiary succession at least three major depositional sequences (Paleocene Eocene to Lower Oligocene, Oligocene Middle Miocene, and Upper Miocene Pliocene) have been identified. Each sequence consists of a package of genetically related formations separated by disconformities. Poorly consolidated, non-marine sand, silt, clay, and carbonaceous sedimentary rocks predominate in the east and north, but each of the depositional sequences includes weakly lithified marine sedimentary rocks in central and southwestern areas. The stratigraphy translates into a number of regional aquifer systems, confining layers and permeability barriers to groundwater flow, each with distinctive characteristics.

<p>In the Mallee region of the west, the Tertiary sediments of the Murray Basin are almost entirely concealed beneath a mainly fossil' arid and semi-arid landscape of Quaternary aeolian dunefields, with minor fluvial and lacustrine morphostratigraphic units. Farther east, where the basin and adjacent highlands are drained by the Murray, Murrumbidgee and Lachlan Rivers, the Tertiary sequence underlies flat-lying fluvio-lacustrine and minor aeolian sediments of the semi-arid landscape of the Riverine Plain. Within the Mallee and Riverine Plain landscapes, active and fossiV (currently inactive) groundwater discharge lake complexes can be identified by characteristic assemblages of Upper Quaternary sediments forming stranded lake floors, gypsum flats, salinas, gypsum and clay pellet dunes and lunettes. These have developed within low-lying areas during the past 0.5 Ma. Their extent indicates the presence of widespread salinisation under 'natural9 conditions at times in the recent geologic past.

<p>The main emphasis of the study is on improving our understanding of the geological context of groundwater and surface discharge in the Murray Basin, but at an early stage the scope of the study was expanded to include reference to other mineral resources. These include Cainozoic limestone, alluvial gold, kaolin, heavy minerals, gypsum and halite deposits. The Tertiary succession contains extensive deposits of currently sub-economic brown coal, underlain by Upper Permian coal in the Oaklands Infrabasin in New South Wales. The Cainozoic Murray Basin is not prospective for hydrocarbons, but several concealed pre-Cainozoic infrabasins remain poorly investigated.

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Identification info

Date (Publication)
1991-01-01T00:00:00
Citation identifier
Geoscience Australia Persistent Identifier/https://pid.geoscience.gov.au/dataset/ga/32

Cited responsible party
Role Organisation / Individual Name Details
Publisher

Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics

Canberra
Author

Brown, C.M.

1
Author

Stephenson, A.E.

2
Name

Bulletin

Issue identification

235

ISBN

0644137827

Point of contact
Role Organisation / Individual Name Details
Custodian

MNHD

Owner

Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia)

Custodian

Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia)

Voice

Spatial resolution

Equivalent scale

Denominator
500000
Topic category
  • Geoscientific information

Extent

N
S
E
W


Maintenance and update frequency
Unknown

Resource format

Title

Product data repository: Various Formats

Website

Data Store directory containing the digital product files

Data Store directory containing one or more files, possibly in a variety of formats, accessible to Geoscience Australia staff only for internal purposes

Keywords
  • GA Publication

  • Bulletin

Theme
  • geology

Keywords
  • AU-NSW

  • AU-SA

  • AU-VIC

Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC)
  • Earth Sciences

Keywords
  • Published_External

Resource constraints

Title

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence

Alternate title

CC-BY

Edition

4.0

Website

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/

Access constraints
License
Use constraints
License

Resource constraints

Title

Australian Government Security ClassificationSystem

Edition date
2018-11-01T00:00:00
Website

https://www.protectivesecurity.gov.au/Pages/default.aspx

Classification
Unclassified
Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8

Distribution Information

Distributor contact
Role Organisation / Individual Name Details
Distributor

Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia)

Voice
OnLine resource

Download the Bulletin (pdf) [194.4 MB]

Download the Bulletin (pdf) [194.4 MB]

Distribution format
  • pdf

OnLine resource

Download only the map (pdf) [14.8 MB]

Download only the map (pdf) [14.8 MB]

Distribution format
  • pdf

Resource lineage

Statement

Unknown

Hierarchy level
Non geographic dataset
Other

GA Publication

Description

Source data not available.

Metadata constraints

Title

Australian Government Security ClassificationSystem

Edition date
2018-11-01T00:00:00
Website

https://www.protectivesecurity.gov.au/Pages/default.aspx

Classification
Unclassified

Metadata

Metadata identifier
urn:uuid/a05f7892-fda1-7506-e044-00144fdd4fa6

Title

GeoNetwork UUID

Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8
Contact
Role Organisation / Individual Name Details
Point of contact

Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia)

Voice

Type of resource

Resource scope
Document
Name

Legacy AGSO BMR Bulletins

Alternative metadata reference

Title

Geoscience Australia - short identifier for metadata record with

uuid

Citation identifier
eCatId/32

Metadata linkage

https://ecat.ga.gov.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/a05f7892-fda1-7506-e044-00144fdd4fa6

Date info (Revision)
2018-04-20T06:04:35
Date info (Creation)
1996-10-29T00:00:00

Metadata standard

Title

AU/NZS ISO 19115-1:2014

Metadata standard

Title

ISO 19115-1:2014

Metadata standard

Title

ISO 19115-3

Title

Geoscience Australia Community Metadata Profile of ISO 19115-1:2014

Edition

Version 2.0, September 2018

Citation identifier
https://pid.geoscience.gov.au/dataset/ga/122551

 
 

Spatial extent

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W


Keywords

geology

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