Skip to Content
No preview available

Actions

Download Analytics Citations

Export to: EndNote  |  Zotero  |  Mendeley

Collections

This file is not currently in any collections.

Modelling overpressure development and the mechanical behaviour of sediments in a complex, tectonically active setting: East Coast Basin, New Zealand [dataset] Open Access

The East Coast Basin (ECB) is a complex, active convergent margin within the North Island of New Zealand, where variable but commonly very high overpressures occur in Cretaceous to Pleistocene stratigraphy, including near-lithostatic pressures at shallow burial depths (<300 m). This study investigates the controls on overpressure generation through time and the changes in mechanical properties of sedimentary rocks as a result of rapid burial, uplift, active tectonic compression, and changes in effective stress. A regional investigation of the Cretaceous to Pleistocene tectono-stratigraphy was combined with seismic and well-log interpretation to understand the structural, stratigraphic, and sedimentation history of the ECB. 1D hydro-mechanical models, which simulate the geological histories of five key wells across the ECB, were built to investigate the overpressure contribution generated by burial disequilibrium compaction and tectonic compression. Present-day overpressure is mainly the result of recent (<6 Ma) tectonic compression because of the subduction of the Pacific Plate beneath the Australian Plate, generating up to ~18 MPa overpressure at 2,000 m TVDSS depth. Burial disequilibrium compaction played a secondary role in overpressure generation, up to 4 MPa at 2,000 m TVDSS depth. Whilst erosive events result in overpressure dissipation, the effects of all but the most recent/ongoing erosion event are masked and overprinted by subsequent sedimentation. Critical state soil mechanics models were used to track the rheological behaviour of low permeability intervals through tectonic and erosive events, with mechanical changes for mudstones and fine-grained carbonates predicted to be through compaction rather than dilation (shear).

Descriptions

Resource type
Dataset
Contributors
Contact person: Jones, Stuart 1
Editor: Jones, Stuart 1
Creator: Calderon Medina, Erika 1
Contact person: Calderon Medina, Erika 1
Data collector: Obradors-Prats, Joshua 2
Editor: Aplin, Andrew 1
Editor: Rouainia, Mohamed 2
Editor: Crook, Anthony 3
1 Durham University, UK
2 Newcastle University, UK
3 Three Cliffs Geomechanical Analysis, UK
Funder
This project was conducted as part of the GeoPOP4 group, an industry-supported research consortium funded by BP and Petrobras together with Durham University and the University of Newcastle.
The GeoPOP4 group also acknowledged the support of the New Zealand Petroleum and Mine Online Exploration Database (NZPAM) and the New Zealand Crown Research Institute (GNS) for permission to use the data.
Research methods
Other description
Keyword
ParaGeo files for models
Overpressure mechanisms
Geo mechanics
Subject
Geothermal resources
Sedimentary basins
Location
New Zealand
Language
Cited in
[forthcoming article in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth]
Identifier
ark:/32150/r21g05fb74d
doi:10.15128/r21g05fb74d
Rights
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY)

Publisher
Durham University
Date Created

File Details

Depositor
J. Bisset
Date Uploaded
Date Modified
21 March 2025, 15:03:04
Audit Status
Audits have not yet been run on this file.
Characterization
File format: zip (ZIP Format)
Mime type: application/zip
File size: 1289581
Last modified: 2025:03:21 11:34:09+00:00
Filename: Supporting Information.zip
Original checksum: c2882ebbda54d0cc9647d2f4909832ec
Activity of users you follow
User Activity Date
User J. Bisset has updated Modelling overpressure development and the mechanical behaviour of sediments in a complex, tectonically active setting: East Coast Basin, New Zealand [dataset] 13 days ago
User J. Bisset has updated Modelling overpressure development and the mechanical behaviour of sediments in a complex, tectonically active setting: East Coast Basin, New Zealand [dataset] 13 days ago
User J. Bisset has updated Modelling overpressure development and the mechanical behaviour of sediments in a complex, tectonically active setting: East Coast Basin, New Zealand 13 days ago
User J. Bisset has deposited Supporting Information.zip 13 days ago