New Tectonic Framework for PNG and the Caroline Plate: Implications for Cessation of Spreading in Back-Arc Basins
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 4
 - File Size:
 - 514 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1987
 
Abstract
At the northern margin of New Guinea there is a fundamental problem related to the relative timing of arc- continent collision(s) represented in the Papuan Fold-Belt  (PFB) and backarc spreading in the Caroline basins. New fission track dates from basement and sediments  within major anticlines of the PFB indicate that uplift  occurred at 4.0 ¦ 0.5 Ma. The timing is consistent with the  fold and thrust shortening (more than 100 km) of the PFB  which occurred in the Late Miocene/Early Pliocene as  evidenced by the deformed Miocene carbonates and Pliocene  molasse deposits. However, in northern Papua New  Guinea, earlier work has suggested that ophiolite  emplacement and associated metamorphism occurred in the  late Oligocene/early Miocene.The evidence suggests that the  late Miocene/early Pliocene deformation was of considerably  greater magnitude than the earlier obduction event. The Caroline Plate lying north of New Guinea has  been interpreted as a backarc basin which commenced  spreading in the Eocene and ceased spreading in the Late  Oligocene (about 28 Ma). The remnant arc presently docked  to New Guinea was active in the Eocene and Oligocene and  is believed to be the arc related to the formation of the  Caroline Plate. The cessation of spreading of the Caroline  Plate has previously been interpreted to be due to arc  continent collision during the Late Oligocene/Early Miocene,  but such a collision is now known not to have occurred. In the Cretaceous and Palaeocene subduction was to  the south beneath New Guinea, but "flipped" in the Eocene  to give a north-dipping subduction zone far to the north of  New Guinea, driving Caroline Plate backarc extension. This  backarc basin reached a limiting size at about 28 Ma resulting  in the end of subduction. With the continued northward  movement of Australia, Mesozoic oceanic crust was  obducted southward onto the New Guinea margin in the Late  Oligocene/Early Miocene. In the Miocene south-dipping  subduction beneath New Guinea commenced until the now  extinct Caroline Plate arc collided with New Guinea in the  Early Pliocene, causing extensive regional compression and  sinistral strike-slip faulting. This new tectonic framework suggests that backarc  basins reach a limiting ridge-trench distance of 1000-1500  knm, beyond which "subduction-pull" cannot drive further  spreading so subduction and spreading are terminated.
Citation
APA: (1987) New Tectonic Framework for PNG and the Caroline Plate: Implications for Cessation of Spreading in Back-Arc Basins
MLA: New Tectonic Framework for PNG and the Caroline Plate: Implications for Cessation of Spreading in Back-Arc Basins. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.