Authors / CoAuthors
Totterdell, J.M. | Bradshaw, B.E.
Abstract
The Jurassic-Cretaceous Bight Basin is situated along the western and central parts of the southern Australian continental margin. The largely offshore basin extends from the southern tip of Western Australia in the west, to just south of Kangaroo Island in the east, where it adjoins the Otway Basin. The thickest depocentre in the basin is the Ceduna Sub-basin, which contains a sedimentary section in excess of 15 km thick. The deepwater Recherche Sub-basin adjoins the Ceduna Sub-basin and extends west along the southern margin as far as the Leeuwin Fracture Zone. Perched half-graben systems of the Denmark, Bremer and Eyre sub-basins lie to the north of the Recherche Sub-basin. The Duntroon Sub-basin adjoins the Ceduna Sub-basin to the east, and consists of a series of oblique extensional depocentres. The Bight Basin evolved through repeated episodes of extension and thermal subsidence leading up to, and following, the commencement of sea-floor spreading between Australia and Antarctica. The basin was initiated during a period of Middle-Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous upper crustal extension. A northwest-southeast to north-south extension direction, superimposed on east-west and northwest-southeast-oriented basement structures, resulted in oblique to strongly oblique extension and the formation of en echelon half graben in the Denmark, Bremer, Eyre, inner Recherche, eastern Ceduna and Duntroon sub-basins. The areal extent of the early extensional structures beneath the thick Ceduna Sub-basin cannot be determined at present. The anomalously thick nature of the Ceduna Sub-basin may indicate, however, that Jurassic-Early Cretaceous rifts are present at depth. Post-rift thermal subsidence was followed by a phase of accelerated subsidence, which commenced in the Late Albian and continued until continental break-up in the Late Santonian-Early Campanian. During this phase of enhanced subsidence, the dominant structural feature was a system of gravity-driven, detached extensional and contractional structures, which developed in the Ceduna Sub-basin during the Cenomanian as a result of deltaic progradation. Evidence for upper crustal extension during this basin phase is limited to Turonian-Santonian extensional faulting, and the reactivation and propagation of Cenomanian growth faults. The commencement of sea-floor spreading at ~83 Ma was followed by a further period of thermal subsidence and establishment of a passive margin
Product Type
nonGeographicDataset
eCat Id
61164
Contact for the resource
Custodian
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Cnr Jerrabomberra Ave and Hindmarsh Dr GPO Box 378
Canberra
ACT
2601
Australia
Keywords
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- External PublicationConference Paper
- ( Theme )
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- structural geology
- ( Theme )
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- continental margins
- ( Theme )
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- geology
- ( Theme )
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- sedimentary basins
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- AU-WA
- Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC)
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- Earth Sciences
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- Published_Internal
Publication Date
2004-01-01T00:00:00
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geoscientificInformation
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Unknown
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Extents
[-37.0, -29.0, 116.0, 138.0]
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