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Australian Journal of Earth Sciences
An International Geoscience Journal of the Geological Society of Australia
Volume 58, 2011 - Issue 1
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Research Papers

Collisional accretion of a Late Ordovician oceanic island arc, northern Tasman Orogenic Zone, Australia

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Pages 1-19 | Received 01 Apr 2010, Accepted 16 Oct 2010, Published online: 22 Jan 2011
 

Abstract

A distinctive Late Ordovician volcano-sedimentary terrane, embracing the Carriers Well Formation and Everetts Creek Volcanics and dismembered slivers now structurally intercalated in the adjoining Wairuna Formation, is located within the Broken River Province of the northern Tasmanides. It abuts a basement of mafic–ultramafic rocks (Gray Creek Complex) and overlying Early Ordovician deep marine sedimentary and volcanic strata (Judea Formation) which host tonalitic plutons. The terrane lies at the western, inboard-margin of the Camel Creek Subprovince, a broad tract of multiply deformed mid-Paleozoic turbidites with minor basalt and chert variously interpreted as the infill of a backarc basin or an accretionary wedge. U–Pb dates from detrital zircon indicate a maximum Late Silurian age for siliciclastic rocks from the previously undated Wairuna Formation. Geochemistry of volcanic rocks from the volcano-sedimentary terrane show them to be largely of mafic to intermediate compositions of calc-alkaline affinity, comparable with broadly coeval Macquarie Arc volcanic suites of the southern Tasmanides. Trace-element systematics identify a subduction relationship for the volcanic suite and V/Ti employed as a discrimination tool identifies the terrane as representing an oceanic island arc, consistent with its sedimentary facies which include volcaniclastic mass flow deposits, limestone, and radiolarian chert. Continent-derived sandstone in the sedimentary assemblage, confirmed by the ages of detrital zircon from a sandstone sample from the Carriers Well Formation, indicates that the oceanic island arc developed proximal to the Late Ordovician continental margin of East Gondwana. Its nature and location bear on the tectonic setting of the entire Camel Creek Subprovince, for which interpretation as an Early Silurian–Early Devonian accretionary wedge is favoured. Collision of the island arc with the continental margin, and associated deformation of part the intervening oceanic crustal tract, now represented by the Gray Creek Complex and its sedimentary cover (Judea Formation) registers the initiation of subduction accretion in late Early Silurian (Llandoverian) time. It marks early-stage orogenesis in the Broken River Province, accurately timed by stratigraphic relationships in the basinal succession developed in the Graveyard Creek Subprovince immediately to the west of the arc assemblage. Tectonism was regionally developed in north Queensland at this time, coeval with the Benambran Orogeny of the Lachlan Orogen in which the Macquarie Arc was likewise accreted to the East Gondwana margin. Benambran orogenesis marks a general phase of shortening, and removal by subduction, of oceanic crust and inversion of continent-derived overlying sedimentary cover along the East Gondwana margin.

Acknowledgements

Assistance from Sebastien Meffre in U–Pb analyses of zircons and geochronological determinations, and from Adella Edwards in drafting the figures, is gratefully acknowledged, as are constructive manuscript reviews from Graziella Caprarelli and Russell Korsch. The Heath family of Lucky Springs is thanked for access to Lucky Springs and support for fieldwork. The work was partially funded by ARC Linkage Grant LP0884011.

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