  <eprint xmlns="http://eprints.org/ep2/data/2.0">
    <eprintid>680</eprintid>
    <rev_number>6</rev_number>
    <eprint_status>archive</eprint_status>
    <userid>81</userid>
    <dir>disk0/00/00/06/80</dir>
    <datestamp>2007-02-14</datestamp>
    <lastmod>2008-07-18 09:47:35</lastmod>
    <status_changed>2008-07-16 15:50:31</status_changed>
    <type>book_section</type>
    <metadata_visibility>show</metadata_visibility>
    <contact_email>Tony.Crawford@utas.edu.au</contact_email>
    <creators>
      <item>
        <name>
          <family>Crawford</family>
          <given>AJ</given>
        </name>
        <id></id>
      </item>
      <item>
        <name>
          <family>Meffre</family>
          <given>S</given>
        </name>
        <id>smeffre@utas.edu.au</id>
      </item>
      <item>
        <name>
          <family>Symonds</family>
          <given>PA</given>
        </name>
        <id></id>
      </item>
    </creators>
    <title>120 to 0 Ma tectonic evolution of the&#13;
southwest Pacific and analogous geological evolution&#13;
of the 600 to 220 Ma Tasman Fold Belt System</title>
    <ispublished>pub</ispublished>
    <subjects>
      <item>260100</item>
    </subjects>
    <full_text_status>public</full_text_status>
    <keywords>Australia, Lachlan Fold Belt, southwest Pacific, subduction, Tasman Fold Belt, tectonics</keywords>
    <suggestions>1/2 sent ltr to pub.9/2 re-emailed pub.&#13;
letter to Geological Society re copyright 25/9 HE &#13;
info@gsa.org.au, businessmanager@gsa.org.au,&#13;
publicity@gsa.org.au, &#13;
anna@gsa.org.au, &#13;
geoedit@arach.net.au,&#13;
tag@gsa.org.au&#13;
geoz@gsa.org.au, &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Dear Heather&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Thank you for your enquiry. The only stipulation the GSA has would be for acknowledgement as the original source. &#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Regards, Sue&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Sue Fletcher&#13;
&#13;
Executive Director&#13;
&#13;
Geological Society of Australia Inc.&#13;
&#13;
Suite 706, 301 George Street&#13;
&#13;
SYDNEY NSW 2000&#13;
&#13;
Tel: 02 9290 2194&#13;
&#13;
Fax: 02 9290 2198&#13;
&#13;
Email: sue@gsa.org.au &#13;
&#13;
http://www.gsa.org.au</suggestions>
    <abstract>We review the tectonic evolution of the SW Pacific east of Australia from ca 120 Ma until the present. A&#13;
key factor that developed early in this interval and played a major role in the subsequent geodynamic&#13;
history of this region was the calving off from eastern Australia of several elongate microcontinental ribbons,&#13;
including the Lord Howe Rise and Norfolk-New Caledonia Ridge. These microcontinental ribbons&#13;
were isolated from Australia and from each other during a protracted extension episode from ca 120 to&#13;
52 Ma, with oceanic crust accretion occurring from 85 to 52 Ma and producing the Tasman Sea and&#13;
the South Loyalty Basin. Generation of these microcontinental ribbons and intervening basins was&#13;
assisted by emplacement of a major mantle plume at 100 Ma beneath the southern part of the Lord&#13;
Howe Rise, which in turn contributed to rapid and efficient eastward trench rollback. A major change&#13;
in Pacific plate motion at ca 55 Ma initiated east-directed subduction along the recently extinct spreading&#13;
centre in the South Loyalty Basin, generating boninitic lithosphere along probably more than 1000&#13;
km of plate boundary in this region, and growth of the Loyalty-Entrecasteaux arc. Continued subduction&#13;
of South Loyalty Basin crust led to the arrival at about 38 Ma of the 70-60 million years old western&#13;
volcanic passive margin of the Norfolk Ridge at the trench, and west-directed emplacement of the&#13;
New Caledonia ophiolite. Lowermost allochthons of this ophiolite are Maastrichtian and Paleocene rift&#13;
tholeiites derived from the underthrusting passive margin. Higher allochthonous sheets include a poorly&#13;
exposed boninitic lava slice, which itself was overridden by the massive ultramafic sheets that cover&#13;
large parts of New Caledonia and are derived from the colliding forearc of the Loyalty-Entrecasteaux&#13;
arc. Post-collisional extensional tectonism exhumed the underthrust passive margin, parts of which have&#13;
blueschist and eclogite facies metamorphic assemblages. Following locking of this subduction zone at&#13;
38-34 Ma, subduction jumped eastward, to form a new west-dipping subduction zone above which&#13;
formed the Vitiaz arc, that contained elements which today are located in the Tongan, Fijian, Vanuatu&#13;
and Solomons arcs. Several episodes of arc splitting fragmented the Vitiaz arc and produced first the&#13;
South Fiji Basin (31-25 Ma) and later (10 Ma to present) the North Fiji Basin. Collision of the Ontong Java&#13;
Plateau, a large igneous province, with the Solomons section of the Vitiaz arc resulted in a reversal of&#13;
subduction polarity, and growth of the Vanuatu arc on clockwise-rotating, older Vitiaz arc and South Fiji&#13;
Basin crust. Continued rollback of the trench fronting the Tongan arc since 6 Ma has split this arc and&#13;
produced the Lau Basin-Havre Trough.&#13;
This southwest Pacific style of crustal growth above a rolling-back slab is applied to the 600-220 Ma&#13;
tectonic development of the Tasman Fold Belt System in southeastern Australia, and explains key&#13;
aspects of the geological evolution of eastern Australia. In particular, collision between a plume-triggered&#13;
600 Ma volcanic passive margin and a 510-515 Ma boninitic forearc of an intra-oceanic arc had&#13;
the same relative orientation and geological effects as that which produced New Caledonia. A new&#13;
subduction system formed probably at least several hundred kilometres east of the collision zone and&#13;
produced the Macquarie arc, in which the oldest lavas were erupted ca 480 Ma. Continued slab rollback&#13;
induced regional extension and the growth of narrow linear troughs in the Macquarie arc, which&#13;
persisted until terminal deformation of this fold belt in the late-Middle to Late Devonian. A similar pattern&#13;
of tectonic development generated the New England Fold Belt between the Late Devonian and Late&#13;
Triassic. Parts of the New England Fold Belt have been broken from Australia and moved oceanward to&#13;
locations in New Zealand, and on the Lord Howe Rise and Norfolk-New Caledonia Rise, during the post-&#13;
120 Ma breakup. Given that the Tasman Fold Belt System grew between 600 and 220 Ma by crustal&#13;
accretion like the southwest Pacific since 120 Ma, facing the open Pacific Ocean, we question whether&#13;
the eastern (Australia-Antarctica) part of the Neoproterozoic Rodinian supercontinent was joined to&#13;
Laurentia.</abstract>
    <date>2003-10-31</date>
    <date_type>submitted</date_type>
    <publication>Geological Society of Australia Special Publication</publication>
    <volume>22</volume>
    <publisher>Geological Society of Australia Special Publication</publisher>
    <place_of_pub>Australia</place_of_pub>
    <pagerange>377-397</pagerange>
    <thesis_type>UNSPECIFIED</thesis_type>
    <refereed>TRUE</refereed>
    <book_title>Evolution and Dynamics of the Australian Plate</book_title>
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