Late Artinskian–Early Kungurian (Early Permian) warming and maximum marine flooding in the East Gondwana interior rift, Timor and Western Australia, and comparisons across East Gondwana

Substantial new information is presented on upper Artinskian–Kungurian deposits in Timor-Leste and in the Canning, Southern Carnarvon and northern Perth basins of Western Australia. These basins, situated between about 35°S and 55°S palaeolatitude, formed part of the East Gondwana interior rift, a p...

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Main Authors: DW Haig, AJ Mory, E McCartain, J Backhouse, E Håkansson, A Ernst, RS Nicoll, Guang Shi, JC Bevan, VI Davydov, AW Hunter, M Keep, SK Martin, D Peyrot, O Kossavaya, ZD Santos
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30090337
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Late_Artinskian_Early_Kungurian_Early_Permian_warming_and_maximum_marine_flooding_in_the_East_Gondwana_interior_rift_Timor_and_Western_Australia_and_comparisons_across_East_Gondwana/20864809
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spelling ftdeakinunifig:oai:figshare.com:article/20864809 2024-06-23T07:56:44+00:00 Late Artinskian–Early Kungurian (Early Permian) warming and maximum marine flooding in the East Gondwana interior rift, Timor and Western Australia, and comparisons across East Gondwana DW Haig AJ Mory E McCartain J Backhouse E Håkansson A Ernst RS Nicoll Guang Shi JC Bevan VI Davydov AW Hunter M Keep SK Martin D Peyrot O Kossavaya ZD Santos 2017-02-15T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30090337 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Late_Artinskian_Early_Kungurian_Early_Permian_warming_and_maximum_marine_flooding_in_the_East_Gondwana_interior_rift_Timor_and_Western_Australia_and_comparisons_across_East_Gondwana/20864809 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30090337 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Late_Artinskian_Early_Kungurian_Early_Permian_warming_and_maximum_marine_flooding_in_the_East_Gondwana_interior_rift_Timor_and_Western_Australia_and_comparisons_across_East_Gondwana/20864809 All Rights Reserved Ecology not elsewhere classified Evolutionary biology not elsewhere classified Geology not elsewhere classified East Gondwana rift Maubisse Group Cribas Group Noonkanbah Formation Byro Group Carynginia Formation Permian climate Science & Technology Physical Sciences Life Sciences & Biomedicine Geography Physical Geosciences Multidisciplinary Paleontology Physical Geography Geology LATE PALEOZOIC GLACIATION CARNARVON BASIN CANNING BASIN KENNEDY-GROUP CROSS-STRATIFICATION CYCLIC SEDIMENTATION CARBONATE DEPOSITION TECTONIC EVOLUTION BARBWIRE TERRACE ISOTOPE RECORDS School of Life and Environmental Sciences 3103 Ecology 3705 Geology Text Journal contribution 2017 ftdeakinunifig 2024-06-06T02:12:25Z Substantial new information is presented on upper Artinskian–Kungurian deposits in Timor-Leste and in the Canning, Southern Carnarvon and northern Perth basins of Western Australia. These basins, situated between about 35°S and 55°S palaeolatitude, formed part of the East Gondwana interior rift, a precursor to the rift that 100 my later formed the Indian Ocean in this region. Timor lay near the main axis of the East Gondwana interior rift, whereas the Western Australian basins were marginal splays from the rift axis. The main depocentres developed as a result of faulting that was initiated during the Late Pennsylvanian. Detailed lithostratigraphic and biostratigraphic analyses have been made on the newly recognized Bua-bai limestone and the type Cribas Group in Timor, the Noonkanbah Formation in the Canning Basin, the Byro Group in the Merlinleigh Sub-basin of the Southern Carnarvon Basin, and the Carynginia Formation in the northern Perth Basin. In Timor the succession, which is highly disrupted by faulting, was deposited under open-marine conditions probably in a shelf–basin setting. Restricted, very shallow-water seas flooded the Canning Basin and the Merlinleigh–Byro–Irwin sub-basins of the Southern Carnarvon and northern Perth basins and had highly variable oxygen levels and salinities typical of estuarine environments. A similar pattern of warming and bathymetric change is recognized in all studied basins. During the early part of the late Artinskian cool conditions prevailed, with water temperatures 0–4 °C forming sea ice in the Merlinleigh–Byro–Irwin rift. Rapid warming during the latter part of the late Artinskian was accompanied by maximum marine flooding close to the Artinskian–Kungurian boundary. Climatic and bathymetric conditions then allowed carbonate mounds, with larger fusulines and a variety of algae, to develop in the northern part of the rift system, and Tubiphytes, conodonts, and brachiopods with Tethyan affinities to migrate into the marginal-rift basins despite the generally adverse water ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Sea ice DRO - Deakin Research Online Indian
institution Open Polar
collection DRO - Deakin Research Online
op_collection_id ftdeakinunifig
language unknown
topic Ecology not elsewhere classified
Evolutionary biology not elsewhere classified
Geology not elsewhere classified
East Gondwana rift
Maubisse Group
Cribas Group
Noonkanbah Formation
Byro Group
Carynginia Formation
Permian climate
Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Geography
Physical
Geosciences
Multidisciplinary
Paleontology
Physical Geography
Geology
LATE PALEOZOIC GLACIATION
CARNARVON BASIN
CANNING BASIN
KENNEDY-GROUP
CROSS-STRATIFICATION
CYCLIC SEDIMENTATION
CARBONATE DEPOSITION
TECTONIC EVOLUTION
BARBWIRE TERRACE
ISOTOPE RECORDS
School of Life and Environmental Sciences
3103 Ecology
3705 Geology
spellingShingle Ecology not elsewhere classified
Evolutionary biology not elsewhere classified
Geology not elsewhere classified
East Gondwana rift
Maubisse Group
Cribas Group
Noonkanbah Formation
Byro Group
Carynginia Formation
Permian climate
Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Geography
Physical
Geosciences
Multidisciplinary
Paleontology
Physical Geography
Geology
LATE PALEOZOIC GLACIATION
CARNARVON BASIN
CANNING BASIN
KENNEDY-GROUP
CROSS-STRATIFICATION
CYCLIC SEDIMENTATION
CARBONATE DEPOSITION
TECTONIC EVOLUTION
BARBWIRE TERRACE
ISOTOPE RECORDS
School of Life and Environmental Sciences
3103 Ecology
3705 Geology
DW Haig
AJ Mory
E McCartain
J Backhouse
E Håkansson
A Ernst
RS Nicoll
Guang Shi
JC Bevan
VI Davydov
AW Hunter
M Keep
SK Martin
D Peyrot
O Kossavaya
ZD Santos
Late Artinskian–Early Kungurian (Early Permian) warming and maximum marine flooding in the East Gondwana interior rift, Timor and Western Australia, and comparisons across East Gondwana
topic_facet Ecology not elsewhere classified
Evolutionary biology not elsewhere classified
Geology not elsewhere classified
East Gondwana rift
Maubisse Group
Cribas Group
Noonkanbah Formation
Byro Group
Carynginia Formation
Permian climate
Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Geography
Physical
Geosciences
Multidisciplinary
Paleontology
Physical Geography
Geology
LATE PALEOZOIC GLACIATION
CARNARVON BASIN
CANNING BASIN
KENNEDY-GROUP
CROSS-STRATIFICATION
CYCLIC SEDIMENTATION
CARBONATE DEPOSITION
TECTONIC EVOLUTION
BARBWIRE TERRACE
ISOTOPE RECORDS
School of Life and Environmental Sciences
3103 Ecology
3705 Geology
description Substantial new information is presented on upper Artinskian–Kungurian deposits in Timor-Leste and in the Canning, Southern Carnarvon and northern Perth basins of Western Australia. These basins, situated between about 35°S and 55°S palaeolatitude, formed part of the East Gondwana interior rift, a precursor to the rift that 100 my later formed the Indian Ocean in this region. Timor lay near the main axis of the East Gondwana interior rift, whereas the Western Australian basins were marginal splays from the rift axis. The main depocentres developed as a result of faulting that was initiated during the Late Pennsylvanian. Detailed lithostratigraphic and biostratigraphic analyses have been made on the newly recognized Bua-bai limestone and the type Cribas Group in Timor, the Noonkanbah Formation in the Canning Basin, the Byro Group in the Merlinleigh Sub-basin of the Southern Carnarvon Basin, and the Carynginia Formation in the northern Perth Basin. In Timor the succession, which is highly disrupted by faulting, was deposited under open-marine conditions probably in a shelf–basin setting. Restricted, very shallow-water seas flooded the Canning Basin and the Merlinleigh–Byro–Irwin sub-basins of the Southern Carnarvon and northern Perth basins and had highly variable oxygen levels and salinities typical of estuarine environments. A similar pattern of warming and bathymetric change is recognized in all studied basins. During the early part of the late Artinskian cool conditions prevailed, with water temperatures 0–4 °C forming sea ice in the Merlinleigh–Byro–Irwin rift. Rapid warming during the latter part of the late Artinskian was accompanied by maximum marine flooding close to the Artinskian–Kungurian boundary. Climatic and bathymetric conditions then allowed carbonate mounds, with larger fusulines and a variety of algae, to develop in the northern part of the rift system, and Tubiphytes, conodonts, and brachiopods with Tethyan affinities to migrate into the marginal-rift basins despite the generally adverse water ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author DW Haig
AJ Mory
E McCartain
J Backhouse
E Håkansson
A Ernst
RS Nicoll
Guang Shi
JC Bevan
VI Davydov
AW Hunter
M Keep
SK Martin
D Peyrot
O Kossavaya
ZD Santos
author_facet DW Haig
AJ Mory
E McCartain
J Backhouse
E Håkansson
A Ernst
RS Nicoll
Guang Shi
JC Bevan
VI Davydov
AW Hunter
M Keep
SK Martin
D Peyrot
O Kossavaya
ZD Santos
author_sort DW Haig
title Late Artinskian–Early Kungurian (Early Permian) warming and maximum marine flooding in the East Gondwana interior rift, Timor and Western Australia, and comparisons across East Gondwana
title_short Late Artinskian–Early Kungurian (Early Permian) warming and maximum marine flooding in the East Gondwana interior rift, Timor and Western Australia, and comparisons across East Gondwana
title_full Late Artinskian–Early Kungurian (Early Permian) warming and maximum marine flooding in the East Gondwana interior rift, Timor and Western Australia, and comparisons across East Gondwana
title_fullStr Late Artinskian–Early Kungurian (Early Permian) warming and maximum marine flooding in the East Gondwana interior rift, Timor and Western Australia, and comparisons across East Gondwana
title_full_unstemmed Late Artinskian–Early Kungurian (Early Permian) warming and maximum marine flooding in the East Gondwana interior rift, Timor and Western Australia, and comparisons across East Gondwana
title_sort late artinskian–early kungurian (early permian) warming and maximum marine flooding in the east gondwana interior rift, timor and western australia, and comparisons across east gondwana
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30090337
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Late_Artinskian_Early_Kungurian_Early_Permian_warming_and_maximum_marine_flooding_in_the_East_Gondwana_interior_rift_Timor_and_Western_Australia_and_comparisons_across_East_Gondwana/20864809
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre Sea ice
genre_facet Sea ice
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30090337
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Late_Artinskian_Early_Kungurian_Early_Permian_warming_and_maximum_marine_flooding_in_the_East_Gondwana_interior_rift_Timor_and_Western_Australia_and_comparisons_across_East_Gondwana/20864809
op_rights All Rights Reserved
_version_ 1802650047461982208