Paleozoic siliciclastic rocks from northern Victoria Land (Antarctica): Provenance, timing of deformation, and implications for the Antarctica-Australia connection

Paleozoic sequences exposed along the Transantarctic Mountains in Antarctica and in southeastern Australia are segments of a formerly contiguous accretionary orogen that developed along the eastern margin of Gondwana. The margin underwent amalgamation and eastward accretion in the early Cambrian to...

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Published in:Geological Society of America Bulletin
Main Authors: Di vincenzo G, Grande A, ROSSETTI, FEDERICO
Other Authors: Di vincenzo, G, Grande, A, Rossetti, Federico
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11590/118836
https://doi.org/10.1130/B31034.1
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spelling ftunivroma3iris:oai:iris.uniroma3.it:11590/118836 2024-02-27T08:35:03+00:00 Paleozoic siliciclastic rocks from northern Victoria Land (Antarctica): Provenance, timing of deformation, and implications for the Antarctica-Australia connection Di vincenzo G Grande A ROSSETTI, FEDERICO Di vincenzo, G Grande, A Rossetti, Federico 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/11590/118836 https://doi.org/10.1130/B31034.1 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/WOS:000343759600002 volume:B31034. 1 journal:GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA BULLETIN http://hdl.handle.net/11590/118836 doi:10.1130/B31034.1 info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-84910011741 info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2014 ftunivroma3iris https://doi.org/10.1130/B31034.1 2024-01-31T17:34:12Z Paleozoic sequences exposed along the Transantarctic Mountains in Antarctica and in southeastern Australia are segments of a formerly contiguous accretionary orogen that developed along the eastern margin of Gondwana. The margin underwent amalgamation and eastward accretion in the early Cambrian to Early Ordovician Ross-Delamerian orogen and in the Ordovician to Carboniferous Lachlan orogen. Northern Victoria Land plays a key role in many geodynamic reconstructions because it has long been considered the along-strike continuation of Australia in Antarctica; however, the correlation between lithotectonic units in Antarctica (Wilson, Bowers, and Robertson Bay terranes) and those in southeastern Australia (Glenelg, Grampians-Stavely, and Stawell zones), as well as the presence of Lachlan-aged tectono-metamorphic events in northern Victoria Land, are still uncertain. 40Ar-39Ar laser experiments on detrital and syndeformational white micas from low-grade siliciclastic rocks of northern Victoria Land, in conjunction with mineral-textural analysis and whole-rock geochemical and Nd isotope data, are used to constrain provenance and the timing of deformation, and to assess analogies with correlative structural zones in southeastern Australia. Detrital white micas of the western lithotectonic unit (Wilson terrane) yielded an age pattern dominated by late Cryogenian to Ediacaran ages (650–550 Ma), closely matching those of turbidites from the Australian Kanmantoo Group. Detrital white micas from the easternmost lithotectonic units (Bowers terrane and Robertson Bay terrane) yield indistinguishable age patterns, strikingly in agreement with those available for the western subprovince of the Lachlan orogen in Australia, which are dominated instead by younger ages with a dominant Ross orogen fingerprint (550–480 Ma). Deposition of siliciclastic detritus in the three lithotectonic units most likely occurred synchronously in the early–middle Cambrian, and the different signatures suggest that detritus was supplied from different ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica Victoria Land Anagrafe della Ricerca d'Ateneo (Universitá degli studi Roma Tre) Victoria Land Transantarctic Mountains Bowers ENVELOPE(164.083,164.083,-85.000,-85.000) Robertson Bay ENVELOPE(170.000,170.000,-71.417,-71.417) Geological Society of America Bulletin 126 11-12 1416 1438
institution Open Polar
collection Anagrafe della Ricerca d'Ateneo (Universitá degli studi Roma Tre)
op_collection_id ftunivroma3iris
language English
description Paleozoic sequences exposed along the Transantarctic Mountains in Antarctica and in southeastern Australia are segments of a formerly contiguous accretionary orogen that developed along the eastern margin of Gondwana. The margin underwent amalgamation and eastward accretion in the early Cambrian to Early Ordovician Ross-Delamerian orogen and in the Ordovician to Carboniferous Lachlan orogen. Northern Victoria Land plays a key role in many geodynamic reconstructions because it has long been considered the along-strike continuation of Australia in Antarctica; however, the correlation between lithotectonic units in Antarctica (Wilson, Bowers, and Robertson Bay terranes) and those in southeastern Australia (Glenelg, Grampians-Stavely, and Stawell zones), as well as the presence of Lachlan-aged tectono-metamorphic events in northern Victoria Land, are still uncertain. 40Ar-39Ar laser experiments on detrital and syndeformational white micas from low-grade siliciclastic rocks of northern Victoria Land, in conjunction with mineral-textural analysis and whole-rock geochemical and Nd isotope data, are used to constrain provenance and the timing of deformation, and to assess analogies with correlative structural zones in southeastern Australia. Detrital white micas of the western lithotectonic unit (Wilson terrane) yielded an age pattern dominated by late Cryogenian to Ediacaran ages (650–550 Ma), closely matching those of turbidites from the Australian Kanmantoo Group. Detrital white micas from the easternmost lithotectonic units (Bowers terrane and Robertson Bay terrane) yield indistinguishable age patterns, strikingly in agreement with those available for the western subprovince of the Lachlan orogen in Australia, which are dominated instead by younger ages with a dominant Ross orogen fingerprint (550–480 Ma). Deposition of siliciclastic detritus in the three lithotectonic units most likely occurred synchronously in the early–middle Cambrian, and the different signatures suggest that detritus was supplied from different ...
author2 Di vincenzo, G
Grande, A
Rossetti, Federico
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Di vincenzo G
Grande A
ROSSETTI, FEDERICO
spellingShingle Di vincenzo G
Grande A
ROSSETTI, FEDERICO
Paleozoic siliciclastic rocks from northern Victoria Land (Antarctica): Provenance, timing of deformation, and implications for the Antarctica-Australia connection
author_facet Di vincenzo G
Grande A
ROSSETTI, FEDERICO
author_sort Di vincenzo G
title Paleozoic siliciclastic rocks from northern Victoria Land (Antarctica): Provenance, timing of deformation, and implications for the Antarctica-Australia connection
title_short Paleozoic siliciclastic rocks from northern Victoria Land (Antarctica): Provenance, timing of deformation, and implications for the Antarctica-Australia connection
title_full Paleozoic siliciclastic rocks from northern Victoria Land (Antarctica): Provenance, timing of deformation, and implications for the Antarctica-Australia connection
title_fullStr Paleozoic siliciclastic rocks from northern Victoria Land (Antarctica): Provenance, timing of deformation, and implications for the Antarctica-Australia connection
title_full_unstemmed Paleozoic siliciclastic rocks from northern Victoria Land (Antarctica): Provenance, timing of deformation, and implications for the Antarctica-Australia connection
title_sort paleozoic siliciclastic rocks from northern victoria land (antarctica): provenance, timing of deformation, and implications for the antarctica-australia connection
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11590/118836
https://doi.org/10.1130/B31034.1
long_lat ENVELOPE(164.083,164.083,-85.000,-85.000)
ENVELOPE(170.000,170.000,-71.417,-71.417)
geographic Victoria Land
Transantarctic Mountains
Bowers
Robertson Bay
geographic_facet Victoria Land
Transantarctic Mountains
Bowers
Robertson Bay
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Victoria Land
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Victoria Land
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/WOS:000343759600002
volume:B31034. 1
journal:GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA BULLETIN
http://hdl.handle.net/11590/118836
doi:10.1130/B31034.1
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-84910011741
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1130/B31034.1
container_title Geological Society of America Bulletin
container_volume 126
container_issue 11-12
container_start_page 1416
op_container_end_page 1438
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