Advanced Search

Australian Journal of Earth Sciences: An International Geoscience Journal of the Geological Society of Australia

Volume 56, Issue 4, 2009

Cambrian intra-oceanic arc accretion to the austral Gondwana margin: constraints on the location of proto-New Zealand

Cambrian intra-oceanic arc accretion to the austral Gondwana margin: constraints on the location of proto-New Zealand

DOI:
10.1080/08120090902806339
J. D. Bradshawa*, M. Gutjahra, S. D. Weavera & K. N. Bassetta

pages 587-594

Available online: 02 Jun 2009

Abstract

Data from New Zealand and northern Victoria Land, Antarctica, indicate that the Cambrian Takaka Terrane intra-oceanic arc/backarc assemblage and the Bowers Terrane intra-oceanic arc/back-arc assemblage were accreted to the Gondwana margin by the Late Cambrian. Compelling similarities between the arc rocks and the immediate post-arc sediments firmly place the two regions in the same tectonic framework and imply close paleogeographic proximity. Currently, the Ross Orogen is thought to be the result of sinistral oblique convergence with west-directed subduction, and accretion of the arc assemblages is attributed to closure of backarc basins. Syntectonic fluvial conglomerates in both regions attest to the development of fluvial systems draining both the accreted arc and the contemporaneous continental margin arc. Trilobite faunas indicate that fluvial sedimentation commenced earlier in New Zealand than in northern Victoria Land. In the context of the widely accepted sinistral oblique convergence model, these data suggest an original position for New Zealand to the south of northern Victoria Land, probably in the region of the southern Ross Sea.

Key Words

 

Details

  • Citation information:
  • Available online: 02 Jun 2009

Author affiliations

  • a Department of Geological Sciences, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch, New Zealand

Journal news

  • 2010 Impact Factor 1.278!
  • © 2011 Thomson Reuters, 2010 Journal Citation Reports®
The Natural Disasters Collection from Routledge - click here to access these articles online

Librarians

Taylor & Francis Group