Origin of a cool‐water, Oligo‐Miocene deep shelf limestone, Eucla Platform, southern Australia

ABSTRACT The Abrakurrie Limestone is an areally extensive, bryozoan‐rich unit within the Eucla Platform, a Tertiary carbonate shelf which caps the central part of the southern Australian continental margin. The onshore portion, the topic of this study, has been exposed since middle Miocene time and...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Sedimentology
Main Authors: JAMES, NOEL P., BONE, YVONNE
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 1991
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3091.1991.tb01263.x
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1111%2Fj.1365-3091.1991.tb01263.x
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/j.1365-3091.1991.tb01263.x
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Summary:ABSTRACT The Abrakurrie Limestone is an areally extensive, bryozoan‐rich unit within the Eucla Platform, a Tertiary carbonate shelf which caps the central part of the southern Australian continental margin. The onshore portion, the topic of this study, has been exposed since middle Miocene time and lies beneath the Nullarbor Plain. The rocks are fine‐sand‐ to granule‐sized calcarenites, composed of bryozoans, bivalves, benthic foraminifera and echinoids with lesser numbers of brachiopods, solitary corals and serpulids. They conspicuously lack significant numbers of planktonic foraminifera and coralline algae. Most bryozoan remains are from delicate branching cyclostomes although delicate branching, robust branching, foliose, fenestrate, multilaminar encrusting and free‐living cheilostomes are variably abundant in specific units. The poorly lithified sequence is punctuated by well‐cemented layers with erosional tops, which are interpreted as hardgrounds. The limestone is interpreted as a cool‐water, deep shelf deposit which accumulated in water depths generally greater than 50 m on the inner part of the Eucla Platform. A model which involves deposition and cementation on a carbonate shelf swept by open ocean swells is proposed to explain the style of sedimentation. The shelf is envisaged as partitioned by the depth of the zone of wave abrasion. Sediments were produced throughout, but accumulated only below this depth. When the seafloor was above this depth it was an environment of cementation and erosion. The vertical sequence correlates in a general way with the global sea‐level model for the mid‐Cenozoic. While accumulation rates for southern Australian carbonates are similar to rates of cool‐water carbonate deposition elsewhere ( c . 2.5 cm kyr ‐1 ), the rate of Abrakurrie accumulation is much less, suggesting that significant time periods are represented by the hardgrounds.