Gippsland Basin Petroleum Accumulations and Production Report to 1986
Updated 1mo ago
2filesPDF
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Description
As of the end of 1986, the Gippsland Basin in Victoria, Australia, had supplied 88% of the country's cumulative crude oil and 48% of its natural gas production. The report details the discovery of 11 economic, 26 subeconomic, and 6 uneconomic offshore accumulations, along with cumulative production and remaining recoverable reserves for oil, condensate, LPG, and sales gas. It was published by the Australian Ocean Data Network.
Use Cases
Analyzing historical petroleum discovery rates based on the counts of economic, subeconomic, and uneconomic accumulations.
Modeling regional energy production trends based on cumulative production figures for oil, condensate, LPG, and gas.
Assessing resource depletion and remaining reserves based on the 1986 estimates for different petroleum products.
Studying geological characteristics of petroleum traps based on the described Oligocene to Late Cretaceous sequences.
Strengths
Provides specific, quantified historical production data, such as 344.66 x 10^6 m³ of cumulative oil production.
Includes detailed discovery statistics, such as 11 economic and 26 subeconomic offshore petroleum accumulations.
Offers concrete reserve estimates as of a specific date (31 December 1986) for multiple resource types.
Limitations
Data is historical, with the primary temporal coverage ending in 1986; freshness should be verified.
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment for quantitative analysis.
Provenance
Source
Australian Ocean Data Network
Collection Method
Report compilation, likely from industry and government records.
Time Range
Historical data up to 31 December 1986.
Freshness
Last updated 2026-04-10 18:23:51.232367; freshness should be verified.
Geography
Gippsland Basin, Victoria, Australia.
Data is provided in PDF and HTML formats, which may require extraction for computational use.