Academic literature on the topic 'Lawn Hill Platform'

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Journal articles on the topic "Lawn Hill Platform"

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Glikson, M., S. D. Golding, and P. N. Southgate. "Thermal Evolution of the Ore-Hosting Isa Superbasin: Central and Northern Lawn Hill Platform." Economic Geology 101, no. 6 (September 1, 2006): 1211–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.2113/gsecongeo.101.6.1211.

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Golding, S. D., I. T. Uysal, M. Glikson, K. A. Baublys, and P. N. Southgate. "Timing and Chemistry of Fluid-Flow Events in the Lawn Hill Platform, Northern Australia." Economic Geology 101, no. 6 (September 1, 2006): 1231–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.2113/gsecongeo.101.6.1231.

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Jarrett, Amber J. M., Adam E. H. Bailey, Christopher J. Boreham, Tehani Palu, Lisa Hall, April Shannon, Alan S. Collins, et al. "A geochemical investigation into the resource potential of the Lawn Hill Platform, northern Australia." APPEA Journal 60, no. 2 (2020): 722. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj19118.

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The Lawn Hill Platform (LHP) is a sedimentary province in north-eastern Northern Territory and north-western Queensland that hosts a significant Paleoproterozoic–Mesoproterozoic sequence, often referred to as 'the ‘Isa Superbasin’, and includes the overlying South Nicholson Group. Shale gas resources and base-metals mineralisation are known in north-west Queensland, but the larger basin is underexplored. The Australian Government’s Exploring for the Future (EFTF) 2016−2020 program aims to boost resource exploration in northern Australia. New precompetitive geochemical data obtained in this program includes source rock geochemistry, kerogen kinetics, bitumen reflectance, biomarker and δ13C n-alkanes for understanding the petroleum potential, organic geochemistry of source rocks and fluids, stratigraphic correlations and mineralogy to determine the brittleness of shales. All data and derived reports are accessible on the EFTF portal (www.eftf.ga.gov.au), providing a central location for informed decision making. The results in this study demonstrate fair to excellent source rocks in multiple supersequences that are brittle and favourable to hydraulic stimulation. A comparison to the greater McArthur Basin demonstrates, that although there are many similarities in bulk geochemistry, LHP mudstones are largely heterogeneous, reflecting local variations that may be inherited from variations in contributing biomass, microbial reworking, depositional environment, sediment input and paleoredox conditions.
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Bailey, Adam H. E., Liuqi Wang, Lisa Hall, and Paul Henson. "Rock properties and in-situ stress state of the Egilabria Prospect, Lawn Hill Platform, Queensland." APPEA Journal 59, no. 1 (2019): 383. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj18260.

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The Energy component of Geoscience Australia’s Exploring for the Future (EFTF) program is aimed at improving our understanding of the petroleum resource potential of northern Australia, in partnership with the state and territory geological surveys. The sediments of the Mesoproterozoic South Nicholson Basin and the underlying Paleoproterozoic Isa Superbasin in the Northern Territory and Queensland are amongst the primary targets of the EFTF Energy program, as they are known to contain organic-rich sedimentary units with the potential to host unconventional gas plays, although their subsurface extent under the cover of the Georgina Basin is presently unknown. In order to economically produce from unconventional reservoirs, the petrophysical rock properties and in-situ stresses must be conducive to the creation of secondary permeability networks that connect a wellbore to as large a reservoir volume as possible. This study utilises data from the recently drilled Armour Energy wells Egilabria 2, Egilabria 2-DW1, and Egilabria 4 to constrain rock properties and in-situ stresses for the Isa Superbasin sequence where intersected on the Lawn Hill Platform of north-west Queensland. These results have implications for petroleum prospectivity in an area with proven gas potential, which are discussed here in the context of the rock properties and in-situ stresses desired for a viable shale gas play. In addition, these results are relevant to potential future exploration across the broader Isa Superbasin sequence.
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Scott, D. L., B. E. Bradshaw, and C. Z. Tarlowski. "The tectonostratigraphic history of the Proterozoic Northern Lawn Hill Platform, Australia: an integrated intracontinental basin analysis." Tectonophysics 300, no. 1-4 (December 1998): 329–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0040-1951(98)00253-4.

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Zhang, Y., P. Sorjonen-ward, A. Ord, and P. N. southgate. "Numerical Modelling of Fluid Flow During Structural Closure of the Isa Superbasin in the Lawn Hill Platform, Northern Australia." ASEG Extended Abstracts 2006, no. 1 (December 2006): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aseg2006ab202.

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Golding, Suzanne D., I. Tongue Uysal, Miryam Glikson, Kim A. Baublys, and Peter N. Southgate. "Thermal and fluid flow history of the Lawn Hill Platform, northern Australia: implications for the formation of Zn-Pb deposits." ASEG Extended Abstracts 2006, no. 1 (December 2006): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aseg2006ab052.

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Krassay, A. A., J. Domagala, B. E. Bradshaw, and P. N. Southgate. "Lowstand ramps, fans and deep‐water Palaeoproterozoic and Mesoproterozoic facies of the Lawn Hill Platform: The Term, Lawn, Wide and Doom Supersequences of the Isa Superbasin, northern Australia." Australian Journal of Earth Sciences 47, no. 3 (June 2000): 563–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1440-0952.2000.00791.x.

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Krassay, A. A., B. E. Bradshaw, J. Domagala, and M. J. Jackson. "Siliciclastic shoreline to growth‐faulted, turbiditic sub‐basins: The Proterozoic River Supersequence of the upper McNamara Group on the Lawn Hill Platform, northern Australia." Australian Journal of Earth Sciences 47, no. 3 (June 2000): 533–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1440-0952.2000.00790.x.

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Jorand, C., K. Connors, L. Pryer, and C. Pietrucha. "A new spatially continuous basement heat flow map for NW Queensland." APPEA Journal 59, no. 2 (2019): 879. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj18042.

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A recently released open file study of the depth-to-basement and basement heat flow is presented, which covers the Queensland portion of the South Nicholson Basin and includes basins underlying the Lawn Hill Platform and Georgina Basin. The present-day basement heat flow model is derived from an analysis of basement composition, structure and history, with the crustal radiogenic and mantle heat flow assessed separately. Resulting from an integrated, iterative interpretation and analysis of a wide range of publicly available spatially continuous geophysical and geological datasets, the heat flow model reproduces faithfully sharp and high-amplitude variations of the published heat flow at small distances. Variations are replicated through the integration of interpreted basement composition and a geologically driven determination of heat production within the radiogenic crustal layer. The values of mantle heat flow based on lithosphere thickness derived from seismic tomography models are consistent with published stable mantle heat flow under terranes of similar age. The long-wavelength regional variations can be attributed to the change in the thickness of the lithosphere. Regionally, the highest values of heat flow are found where radiogenic crust is the thickest and the composition is interpreted to comprise radiogenic intrusives.
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Books on the topic "Lawn Hill Platform"

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Falconer, Russ. McGraw-Hill Education LSAT 2015, Cross-Platform Edition. McGraw-Hill Companies, The, 2015.

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Johnson, Drew, and Russ Falconer. McGraw-Hill Education LSAT 2017 Cross-Platform Prep Course. McGraw-Hill Education, 2016.

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Conference papers on the topic "Lawn Hill Platform"

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Bailey, Adam H. E., Amber J. M. Jarrett, Barry Bradshaw, Lisa S. Hall, Liuqi Wang, Tehani J. Palu, Meredith Orr, Lidena K. Carr, and Paul Henson. "Shale Gas Prospectivity of the Lawn Hill Platform, Isa Superbasin." In SPE/AAPG/SEG Asia Pacific Unconventional Resources Technology Conference. Tulsa, OK, USA: Unconventional Resources Technology Conference, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.15530/ap-urtec-2019-198332.

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Richard, Antonin, Joséphine Gigon, Julien Mercadier, Etienne Deloule, Irvine R. Annesley, Andrew Wygralak, and Roger Skirrow. "Zn-Pb ore-forming processes in the McArthur Basin and Lawn Hill Platform (Australia): Insights from lead isotopes and trace elements in sulphides." In Goldschmidt2021. France: European Association of Geochemistry, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7185/gold2021.8199.

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Biral, Francesco, Enrico Bertolazzi, Daniele Bortoluzzi, and Paolo Bosetti. "Development and Testing of an Autonomous Driving Module for Critical Driving Conditions." In ASME 2008 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2008-68487.

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In the last years a great effort has been devoted to the development of autonomous vehicles able to drive in a high range of speeds in semi-structured and unstructured environments. This article presents and discusses the software framework for Hardware-In-the-Loop (HIL) and Software-In-the-Loop (SIL) analysis that has been designed for developing and testing of control laws and mission functionalities of semi-autonomous and autonomous vehicles. The ultimate goal of this project is to develop a robotic system, named RUMBy, able to autonomously plan and execute accurate optimal manoeuvres both in normal and in critical driving situations and to be used as a test platform for advanced decision and autonomous driving algorithms. RUMBy’s hardware is a 1:6 scale gasoline engine R/C car with onboard telemetry and control systems. RUMBy’s software consists of three main modules: the manager module that coordinates the other modules and take high level decision; the motion planner module which is based on a Nonlinear Receding Horizon Control (NRHC) algorithm; the actuation module that produces the driving command for the vehicle. The article describes the details of RUMBy architecture and discusses its modular configuration that easily allows HIL and SIL tests.
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Cappelli, M., B. Castillo-Toledo, S. Di Gennaro, F. Memmi, and M. Sepielli. "Digital Nonlinear Control for a Pressurizer in a Pressurized Water Reactor." In 2013 21st International Conference on Nuclear Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icone21-16374.

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Studying criteria ensuring better implementations of control laws and logics on digital programmable devices is today a crucial point in order to improve performance and safety in nuclear plants of novel design. To this aim, a mathematical model of a PWR is considered, describing the dynamics of the primary circuit. This model is simple enough to allow the determination of a control policy, but it is also sufficiently accurate to capture the nonlinear, time–varying, and switching nature of the system. A dynamic controller for the pressurizer pressure and water level is hence designed. Its main advantage is the reduction of the control response. This latter is a classical drawback, which may cause some troubles to pressure control, due to the long response of temperature sensors. The digital implementation of the controller has been taken into account to study the important aspects of the influence of the implementation on the performance of the control law. A particularly effective and flexible environment where it is possible to analyze these aspects is Matlab/Simulink, a general–purpose tool for analysis and simulation of multi–domain dynamic systems, practically a standard in control implementations, also in industrial applications. The designed controller ensures a good performance when applied to the model used to derive them, also in the presence of unmodeled uncertainties and disturbances. Its nonlinear switching nature, reflecting the real pressurizer dynamics, ensures better transient behaviors. Since it contains a PI action, it represents an evolution and an improvement with respect to classical PID controllers, usually implemented in standard control actions. To better analyze the control performance, three steps have been considered: first, the designed nonlinear controller has been compared with a linear one. Second, it has been tested on a more detailed model, with more realistic dynamics. Finally, the digital implementation of the controller has been simulated, in order to optimize the electronic implementation on the FPGA–CPU hybrid platform. A simulation study has been conducted with sampling times in ascending order, to further test its robustness against delays. LabVIEW development tool and technology has been chosen to create the electronic layout and to obtain preliminary results in terms of timing, resources availability and power consumption. Due to the same graphical mode of programming, an immediate link between Matlab/Scilab and LabVIEW is possible in order to optimize the use of each language where it guarantees the best performance. The methodology here presented could be very useful to better integrate the different features of control engineering and IC design, thus giving the possibility of realizing more accurate simulations and permitting to perform a hardware in the loop (HIL) testing of a wide variety of control algorithms.
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Reports on the topic "Lawn Hill Platform"

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Bradshaw, B. E., M. L. Orr, A. H. E. Bailey, T. J. Palu, and L. S. Hall. Northern Lawn Hill Platform Depth Structure and Isochore Mapping Update. Geoscience Australia, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2018.047.

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Bailey, A. H. E., A. J. M. Jarrett, L. Wang, D. C. Champion, L. S. Hall, and P. Henson. Shale brittleness in the Isa Superbasin in the northern Lawn Hill Platform. Geoscience Australia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/133723.

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Palu, T. J., A. J. M. Jarrett, S. K. MacFarlane, C. J. Boreham, and B. E. Bradshaw. Source rock and maturity modelling of the northern Lawn Hill Platform, Isa Superbasin. Geoscience Australia, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2021.031.

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Jarrett, A. J. M., A. H. E. Bailey, D. N. Dewhurst, L. Esteban, S. Kager, and L. Monmusson. Exploring for the Future- South Nicholson Basin and Lawn Hill Platform Geomechanical testing data release. Geoscience Australia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2020.026.

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Jarrett, A. J. M., C. J. Boreham, T. J. Palu, I. Long, Z. Hong, and J. Chen. Bulk kinetics of Proterozoic kerogens from the McArthur Basin and Lawn Hill Platform, northern Australia. Geoscience Australia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2020.037.

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Palu, T. J., A. J. M. Jarrett, M. L. Orr, B. E. Bradshaw, L. S. Hall, C,J, Boreham, and S. K. MacFarlane. Burial and thermal history analysis of the northern Lawn Hill Platform, Isa Superbasin, Part A. Geoscience Australia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2020.038.

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Grosjean, E., A. J. M. Jarrett, L. Carr, Z. Hong, N. Jinadasa, and T. Buckler. Total Organic Carbon (TOC) and Rock-Eval pyrolysis data of samples from wells of the northern Lawn Hill Platform, Queensland, Australia. Geoscience Australia, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2021.006.

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Champion, D. C., D. Huston, P. Main, A. J. M. Jarrett, J. Thorne, S. Gilmore, S. Webber, et al. Exploring for the Future – Baseline whole rock geochemistry of northern Australia: data release — geochemistry of drill core samples from the McArthur Basin, Lawn Hill platform and Tomkinson Province, Northern Territory and Queensland. Geoscience Australia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2020.041.

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