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Modelling the Palaeozoic tectonic evolution of the Lachlan Orogen

24/09/2021 by Thomas Brand

Modelling the Palaeozoic tectonic evolution of the Lachlan Orogen

 

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Publication Name: Australasian Exploration Geoscience Conference 2019

Authors: Thomas Schaan, Sebastien Meffre, Joanne Whitakker, Matthew Cracknell, Michael Roach

Date Published: September 2019

Number of Pages: 5

Abstract:

The Lachlan Orogen’s mineral wealth is a direct result of tectonic processes that took place in the early Palaeozoic, but the exact nature and timing of events is widely contested. Here, we apply new methods of deforming tectonic reconstruction modelling to the area. The resulting reconstructions enable us to consistently compare alternative, previously-proposed models and test them against new and old data. This approach highlights model self-inconsistencies and incompatibilities with available data. We adopted an approach where the most valid components of individual tectonic reconstructions were combined to produce a new reconstruction model constrained by the most recent data. The new model invokes two concurrent subduction zones from the Early Cambrian to the Late Ordovician. It includes a consistent continent-dipping subduction at the Eastern Gondwanan margin, and an outboard subduction complex, which experiences multiple reversals. These are responsible for an unnamed Cambrian Arc and its obduction in Tasmania, which is part of the microcontinent VanDieland before accretion to Gondwana in the late Cambrian. The Macquarie Arc later develops in the Ordovician over the Cambrian Arc. A single continent-dipping system then resumes following the Benambran Orogeny, when oroclinal folding occurs across south-eastern Australia followed by east-west shortening of the Tabberabberan Orogeny.

Tags: AEGC

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