Geophysical Studies in the Southwest Pacific : Primarily Studies of Crustal Structure between New Zealand and Antarctica

Geophysical data - primarily magnetic field measurements, bathymetry, and seismicity data - are presented for the area between New Zealand and Antarctica from approximately 145[degrees]W to 155[degrees]E. The data are used to determine the structure of the Pacific-Antarctic boundary, the oceanic par...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Falconer, Robin Keith Halcro
Other Authors: Christoffel, D A
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Victoria University of Wellington 1974
Subjects:
Online Access:http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/1002
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spelling ftvuwellington:oai:researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz:10063/1002 2023-08-15T12:38:49+02:00 Geophysical Studies in the Southwest Pacific : Primarily Studies of Crustal Structure between New Zealand and Antarctica Falconer, Robin Keith Halcro Christoffel, D A 1974 http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/1002 en_NZ eng Victoria University of Wellington http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/1002 Magnetic anomalies Geomagnetism Geophysics Oceanography Text Doctoral 1974 ftvuwellington 2023-07-25T17:22:45Z Geophysical data - primarily magnetic field measurements, bathymetry, and seismicity data - are presented for the area between New Zealand and Antarctica from approximately 145[degrees]W to 155[degrees]E. The data are used to determine the structure of the Pacific-Antarctic boundary, the oceanic part of the Pacific plate and the area of intersection of the Indian, Pacific and Antarctic plates. In the southwest Pacific basin the magnetic anomalies are very clear and an extensive pattern of anomaly lineations with some offsets is mapped. The magnetic anomalies show that the uniform Pacific basin area formed between about 83 and 63 mybp. The Pacific-Antarctic boundary is shown to differ either side of about 175[degrees]W. To the east it is a relatively uniform aseismic spreading ridge, offset by some transform faults. West of 175[degrees]W, to 161[degrees]E, the boundary consists of a seismically active zone of disturbed bathymetry and magnetic anomalies striking about N.70[degrees]W. The zone, the Pacific-Antarctic fracture zone, probably consists of several fractures striking about N45[degrees]W. The area between the Pacific-Antarctic boundary and the southwest Pacific basin represents the interval 10 to -55 mybp, and only in the east are anomaly lineations clear. The Indian-Antarctic Pacific triple junction is near 61.5[degrees]S, 161[degrees]E and is a stable ridge-fault-fault junction; the Indian-Antarctic boundary being the ridge. Plate tectonics is applied to the area and the structure is shown to fit, and be explained by a different rotation pole for each of the major intervals indicated by the structure, i.e. 0-10 mybp, 10-63 mybp and 63-80 mybp. The poles, with rotation rates deduced from the magnetic anomalies, are used to reconstruct the position of New Zealand relative to Antarctica at 80 mybp. The two continents probably started to separate at close to 83 mybp. The times of the major changes of structure and plate movement in the area are shown to coincide with major plate movement changes in the ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Victoria University of Wellington: ResearchArchive Antarctic Indian New Zealand Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Victoria University of Wellington: ResearchArchive
op_collection_id ftvuwellington
language English
topic Magnetic anomalies
Geomagnetism
Geophysics
Oceanography
spellingShingle Magnetic anomalies
Geomagnetism
Geophysics
Oceanography
Falconer, Robin Keith Halcro
Geophysical Studies in the Southwest Pacific : Primarily Studies of Crustal Structure between New Zealand and Antarctica
topic_facet Magnetic anomalies
Geomagnetism
Geophysics
Oceanography
description Geophysical data - primarily magnetic field measurements, bathymetry, and seismicity data - are presented for the area between New Zealand and Antarctica from approximately 145[degrees]W to 155[degrees]E. The data are used to determine the structure of the Pacific-Antarctic boundary, the oceanic part of the Pacific plate and the area of intersection of the Indian, Pacific and Antarctic plates. In the southwest Pacific basin the magnetic anomalies are very clear and an extensive pattern of anomaly lineations with some offsets is mapped. The magnetic anomalies show that the uniform Pacific basin area formed between about 83 and 63 mybp. The Pacific-Antarctic boundary is shown to differ either side of about 175[degrees]W. To the east it is a relatively uniform aseismic spreading ridge, offset by some transform faults. West of 175[degrees]W, to 161[degrees]E, the boundary consists of a seismically active zone of disturbed bathymetry and magnetic anomalies striking about N.70[degrees]W. The zone, the Pacific-Antarctic fracture zone, probably consists of several fractures striking about N45[degrees]W. The area between the Pacific-Antarctic boundary and the southwest Pacific basin represents the interval 10 to -55 mybp, and only in the east are anomaly lineations clear. The Indian-Antarctic Pacific triple junction is near 61.5[degrees]S, 161[degrees]E and is a stable ridge-fault-fault junction; the Indian-Antarctic boundary being the ridge. Plate tectonics is applied to the area and the structure is shown to fit, and be explained by a different rotation pole for each of the major intervals indicated by the structure, i.e. 0-10 mybp, 10-63 mybp and 63-80 mybp. The poles, with rotation rates deduced from the magnetic anomalies, are used to reconstruct the position of New Zealand relative to Antarctica at 80 mybp. The two continents probably started to separate at close to 83 mybp. The times of the major changes of structure and plate movement in the area are shown to coincide with major plate movement changes in the ...
author2 Christoffel, D A
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Falconer, Robin Keith Halcro
author_facet Falconer, Robin Keith Halcro
author_sort Falconer, Robin Keith Halcro
title Geophysical Studies in the Southwest Pacific : Primarily Studies of Crustal Structure between New Zealand and Antarctica
title_short Geophysical Studies in the Southwest Pacific : Primarily Studies of Crustal Structure between New Zealand and Antarctica
title_full Geophysical Studies in the Southwest Pacific : Primarily Studies of Crustal Structure between New Zealand and Antarctica
title_fullStr Geophysical Studies in the Southwest Pacific : Primarily Studies of Crustal Structure between New Zealand and Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Geophysical Studies in the Southwest Pacific : Primarily Studies of Crustal Structure between New Zealand and Antarctica
title_sort geophysical studies in the southwest pacific : primarily studies of crustal structure between new zealand and antarctica
publisher Victoria University of Wellington
publishDate 1974
url http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/1002
geographic Antarctic
Indian
New Zealand
Pacific
geographic_facet Antarctic
Indian
New Zealand
Pacific
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
op_relation http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/1002
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