Ophiolites and Intra‐Oceanic Island Arc Assemblages of Eastern Australia, New Caledonia and New Zealand

Throughout the Phanerozoic the eastern margin of Gondwana and related fragments such as New Caledonia and New Zealand that are now dispersed from it grew through the addition of ophiolites and associated intra‐oceanic island arc assemblages. Exactly how and why this occurred remains controversial wi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Acta Geologica Sinica - English Edition
Main Author: AITCHISON, Jonathan C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1755-6724.13148
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1111%2F1755-6724.13148
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/1755-6724.13148
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Summary:Throughout the Phanerozoic the eastern margin of Gondwana and related fragments such as New Caledonia and New Zealand that are now dispersed from it grew through the addition of ophiolites and associated intra‐oceanic island arc assemblages. Exactly how and why this occurred remains controversial with two main competing models referred to as either ‘quantum'or‘accordion’ tectonics. The quantum model envisages continental growth through the additional of discrete intra‐oceanic assemblages analogous to contemporary tectonic settings in Taiwan, Timor and Papua New Guinea (Aitchison and Buckman, 2012). The alternative regards eastern Australia as the type example of a different style of convergent plate margin referred to as an ‘extensional accretionary orogeny’ (Collins, 2002). The oldest Phanerozoic ophiolites and intra‐oceanic island arc assemblages are of Cambrian age and are widely reported from the Lachlan Fold Belt in the eastern Australian states of Victoria and NSW (Spaggiari et al., 2003; Greenfield et al., 2011). Similar rocks are also known from Mount Read in Tasmania (Berry and Crawford, 1988; Crawford and Berry, 1992; Mulder et al., 2016), the Weraerai terrane and its correlatives in the New England orogen further east in northeastern NSW (Aitchison et al., 1994; Aitchison and Ireland, 1995) and Queensland, the Takaka terrane in NW Nelson, New Zealand (Münker and Cooper, 1999) and the Bowers terrane in Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica (Weaver et al., 1984; Münker and Crawford, 2000; Rocchi et al., 2011; Palmeri et al., 2012). The Late Ordovician saw the development of the intra‐oceanic Macquarie island arc (Glen et al., 1998; Glen et al., 2007). This system contains important economic mineral deposits. The way in which these arc rocks developed and were juxtaposedagainst a surrounding suite of Lachlan Fold Belt, eastern Australia remains the subject of investigation (see Aitchison and Buckman, 2012 for discussion). In a similar area, enigmatic rocks of the Tumut ophiolite also crop out (Graham et ...