tectonic
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A short article describing the outcomes of the Tasman Frontier Petroleum Industry Workshop held at Geoscience Australia on 8 and 9 March 2012.
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Interpretation of the Capricorn deep seismic reflection survey has provided images which allow us to examine the geodynamic relationships between the Pilbara Craton, Capricorn Orogen and Yilgarn Craton in Western Australia. Prior to the seismic survey, suture zones were proposed at the Talga Fault, between the Pilbara Craton and the Capricorn Orogen, and at the Errabiddy Shear Zone between the Yilgarn Craton and the Glenburgh Terrane, the southernmost component of the Capricorn Orogen. Our interpretation of the seismic lines indicates that there is a suture between the Pilbara Craton and the newly-recognised Bandee Seismic Province. Our interpretation also suggests that the Capricorn Orogen can be subdivided into at least two discrete crustal blocks, with the interpretation of a suture between them at the Lyons River Fault. Finally, the seismic interpretation has confirmed previous interpretations that the crustal architecture between the Narryer Terrane of the Yilgarn Craton and the Glenburgh Terrane consists of a south-dipping structure in the middle to lower crust, with the Errabiddy Shear Zone being an upper crustal thrust system where the Glenburgh Terrane has been thrust to the south over the Narryer Terrane.
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Australian Governments over the past decade have acquired thousands of kilometres of high-quality deep-seismic reflection data. The deep-seismic reflection method is unique among imaging techniques in giving textural information as well as a cross sectional view of the overall crust, including the character of the middle crust, lower crust, Moho, and any upper mantle features. Seismic reflection data can be readily integrated with other geophysical and geological data to provide an unsurpassed understanding of a region's geological history as well as the mineral and energy resource potential. Continental Australia is made up of four main elements (blocks), separated by orogens. Most boundaries between the elements are deeply rooted in the lithosphere, and formed during amalgamation of Australia. Major boundaries within the elements attest to their individual amalgamation, mostly prior to the final construction of the continent. Many of Australia's mineral and energy resources are linked to these deep boundaries, with modern seismic reflection providing excellent images of the boundaries. All of the seismic surveys have provided new geological insights. These insights have significantly advanced the understanding of Australian tectonics. Examples include: preservation of extensional architecture in an otherwise highly shortened terrane (Arunta, Yilgarn, Mt Isa and Tanami), unknown deep structures associated with giant mineral deposits (Olympic Dam, Yilgarn, Gawler-Curnamona), as well as the discovery of unknown basins, sutures and possible subduction zones (Arunta, North Queensland, Gawler-Curnamona). These new insights provide not only an improved tectonic understanding, but also new concepts and target areas for mineral and energy resources.
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Numerous disparate and, in many cases, mutually inconsistent models for the Proterozoic amalgamation and evolution of the Australian continent have been published over the past ~15 years. Most of the models involve large-scale relative movements between pre-existing cratonic blocks, as well as accretion of relatively juvenile crust to cratonic margins, via modern style subduction-tectonics. As such, improved geological understanding of the margins of the major constituent cratonic blocks is critical to testing between contrasting evolutionary models. Both the northern and eastern margins of the Gawler Craton, South Australia, are characterised by shear zones with strike lengths of several hundred kilometres; the Karari Shear Zone in the north, and the Kalinjala Shear Zone in the east. Each of these structures preserves evidence for very significant strike-slip motion, but also juxtaposes rocks from different crustal levels indicating significant dip-slip motion. Recently-acquired deep seismic transects across each of these cratonic margins, together with new U-Pb and 40Ar/39Ar geochronology are interpreted to indicate that the Karari Shear Zone was likely active in at least three episodes through the Paleo- and Mesoproterozoic, and currently preserves an overall north-dipping thrust geometry that dates from the early Mesoproterozoic (~1580 - 1450 Ma). In contrast, on the eastern margin of the craton, the northern part of the Kalinjala Shear Zone preserves an east-dipping bulk extensional geometry that dates from the Paleoproterozoic (~1800 - 1740 Ma). The temporal evolution of the margins of the Gawler Craton provides constraints on models invoking tectonic interaction with other parts of Proterozoic Australia.
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A deep seismic reflection and magnetotelluric survey, conducted in 2007, established the architecture and geodynamic framework of north Queensland, Australia. Results based on the interpretation of the deep seismic data include the discovery of a major, west-dipping, Paleoproterozoic (or older) crustal boundary, interpreted the Gidyea Suture Zone, separating relatively nonreflective, thick crust of the Mount Isa Province from thinner, two layered crust to the east. East of the Mount Isa Province, the lower crust is highly reflective and is subdivided into three mappable seismic provinces (Numil, Abingdon and Agwamin) which are not exposed at the surface. To the west of Croydon, a second major crustal boundary also dips west or southwest, offsetting the Moho and extending below it. It is interpreted as the Rowe Fossil Subduction Zone. This marks the boundary between the Numil and Abingdon seismic provinces, and is overlain by the Etheridge Province. The previously unknown Millungera Basin was imaged below the Eromanga-Carpentaria basin system. In the east, the Greenvale and Charters Towers Provinces, part of the Thomson Orogen, have been mapped on the surface as two discrete provinces, but the seismic interpretation raises the possibility that these two provinces are continuous in the subsurface, and also extend northwards to beneath the Hodgkinson Province, originally forming part of an extensive Neoproterozoic-Cambrian passive margin. Continuation of this passive margin at depth beneath the Hodgkinson and Broken River Provinces suggests that these provinces (which formed in an oceanic environment, possibly as an accretionary wedge at a convergent margin) have been thrust westwards onto the older continental passive margin. The Tasman Line, originally defined to represent the eastern limit of Precambrian rocks in Australia, has a complicated geometry in three dimensions, which is related to regional deformational events during the Paleozoic.
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Preserved within the Glenelg River Complex of SE Australia is a sequence of metamorphosed late Neoproterozoic-early Cambrian deep marine sediments intruded by mafic rocks ranging in composition from continental tholeiites to mid-ocean ridge basalts. This sequence originated during breakup of the Rodinia supercontinent and is locally host to lenses of variably sheared and serpentinised mantle-derived peridotite (Hummocks Serpentinite) representing the deepest exposed structural levels within the metamorphic complex. Direct tectonic emplacement of these rocks from mantle depths is considered unlikely and the ultramafites are interpreted here as fragments of sub-continental lithosphere originally exhumed at the seafloor during continental breakup through processes analogous to those that produced the hyper-extended continental margins of the North Atlantic. Subsequent to burial beneath marine sediments, the exhumed ultramafic rocks and their newly acquired sedimentary cover were deformed and tectonically dismembered during arc-continent collision accompanying the early Paleozoic Delamerian Orogeny, and transported to higher structural levels in the hangingwalls of west-directed thrust faults. Thrust-hosted metasedimentary rocks yield detrital zircon populations that constrain the age of mantle exhumation and attendant continental breakup to be no later than late Neoproterozoic-earliest Cambrian. A second extensional event commencing ca. 490 Ma overprints the Delamerian-age structures; it was accompanied by granite magmatism and low pressure-high temperature metamorphism but outside the zone of magmatic intrusion failed to erase the original, albeit modified, rift geometry. This geometry originally extended southward into formerly contiguous parts of the Ross Orogen in Antarctica where mafic-ultramafic rocks are similarly hosted by a deformed continental margin sequence.
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The NSW component of the Australian Lithospheric Architecture Magnetotelluric Project (AusLAMP), is a collaboration between Geoscience Australia and the Geological Survey of New South Wales which commenced in 2016. Long-period MT data have been recorded at a 55-km spacing in a rolling deployment which to date has completed 224 of a planned 320 sites in NSW. This article summarises the progress of the AusLAMP NSW program and highlights how it is contributing to our understanding of the tectonic architecture in NSW.
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The geological evolution of Australia is closely linked to supercontinent cycles that have characterised the tectonic evolution of Earth, with most geological and metallogenic events relating to the assembly and breakup of Vaalbara, Kenorland, Nuna, Rodinia and Pangea-Gondwana. Australia largely grew from west to east, with two major Archean cratons, the Yilgarn and Pilbara Cratons, forming the oldest part of the continent in the West Australian Element. The centre consists mostly of the largely Paleo-to Mesoproterozoic North and South Australian Elements, whereas the east is dominated by the Phanerozoic-Mesozoic Tasman Element. The West, North and South Australian Elements initially assembled during the Paleoproterozoic amalgamation of Nuna, and the Tasman Element formed as a Paleozoic accretionary margin during the assembly of Gondwana-Pangea. Australia's present position as a relatively stable continent resulted from the break-up of Gondwana. Australia is moving northward toward southeast Asia, probably during the earliest stages of the assembly of the next supercontinent, Amasia. Australia's resources, both mineral and energy, are linked to its tectonic evolution and the supercontinent cycle. Clusters of resources, both in space and time, are associated with Australia's tectonic history and the Earth's supercontinent cycles. Australia's most important gold province is the product of the assembly of Kenorland, whereas its major zinc-lead-silver deposits and iron-oxide-copper-gold deposits formed as Nuna broke up. The diverse metallogeny of the Tasman Element is a product of Pangea-Gondwana assembly and most of Australia's hydrocarbon resources are a consequence of the break-up of this supercontinent.
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Presentation delivered on 8 March 2012 at the Tasman Frontier Petroleum Industry Workshop, 8-9 March 2012, Geoscience Australia, Canberra.
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Paleoproterozoic-earliest Mesoproterozoic sequences in the Mount Isa region of northern Australia preserve a 200 Myr record (1800-1600 Ma) of intracontinental rifting, culminating in crustal thinning, elevated heat flow and establishment of a North American Basin and Range-style crustal architecture in which basin evolution was linked at depth to bimodal magmatism, high temperature-low pressure metamorphism and the formation of extensional shear zones. This geological evolution and record is amenable to investigation through a combination of mine visits and outcrop geology, and is the principal purpose of this field guide. Rifting initiated in crystalline basement -1840 Ma old and produced three stacked sedimentary basins (1800-1750 Ma Leichhardt, 1730-1670 Ma Calvert and 1670-1575 Ma Isa superbasins) separated by major unconformities and in which depositional conditions progressively changed from fluviatile-lacustrine to fully marine. By 1685 Ma, a deep marine, turbidite-dominated basin existed in the east and basaltic magmas had evolved in composition from continental to oceanic tholeiites as the crust became increasingly thinned and attenuated. Except for an episode of minor deformation and basin inversion at c. 1640 Ma, sedimentation continued across the region until onset of the Isan Orogeny at 1600 Ma.