scholarly journals Course of the lower River Murray in South Australia: effects of underprinting and neotectonics?

2009 ◽  
Vol 121 (2) ◽  
pp. 207 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.R. Twidale ◽  
J.A. Bourne

The change in direction of the River Murray from westerly to southerly at North West Bend has been attributed to faulting or warping, but no appropriate structure has been located in the country rock coincident with the river course. Yet the angularity and the straightness of major sectors argue structural control. The plan course of the Murray downstream from Morgan is attributed to underprinting from basement fractures following the Middle Miocene but prior to the Late Pliocene. Uplift of the Marmon Jabuk structure superimposed on the effects of underprinting accounts for major departures from the SSW trend downstream from North West Bend, as well as the impounding of Lake Bungunnia. The upper shallow section of the valley-in-valley form was shaped at a time of higher baselevel in the Middle-Late Tertiary. The lower section is the present Gorge. The valley floor was lowered probably by subterranean solution and flow followed by collapse of the cavern roofs. Regression of the River at times of lower sea level caused the breach of the Marmon Jabuk blockage and the draining of Lake Bungunnia.

2009 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georgina Ryan ◽  
George Bernardel ◽  
John Kennard ◽  
Andrew T Jones ◽  
Graham Logan ◽  
...  

Numerous Miocene reefs and related carbonate build-ups have been identified in the Rowley Shoals region of the central North West Shelf, offshore Western Australia. The reefs form part of an extensive Miocene reef tract over 1,600 km long, which extended northward into the Browse and Bonaparte basins and southward to North West Cape in the Carnarvon Basin—comparable in length to the modern Great Barrier Reef. Growth of the vast majority of these Miocene reefs failed to keep pace with relative sea-level changes in the latest Miocene, whereas reef growth continued on the central North West Shelf to form the three present-day atolls of the Rowley Shoals: Mermaid, Clerke and Imperieuse reefs. In the Rowley Shoals region, scattered small build-ups and local reef complexes were first established in the Early Miocene, but these build-ups were subsequently terminated at a major Mid Miocene sequence boundary. Widespread buildups and atoll reefs were re-established in the Middle Miocene, and the internal stacking geometries of the reefs appear to relate to distinct growth phases that are correlated with eustatic sea-level fluctuations. These geometries include: a basal aggradational buildup of early Middle Miocene age; a strongly progradational growth phase in the late Middle to early Late Miocene that constructed large reef atolls with infilling lagoon deposits; and a back-stepped aggradational growth phase that formed smaller reef caps in the early–latest Late Miocene. Growth of the majority of the reefs ceased at a major sea-level fall in the Late Miocene (Messinian), and only the reefs of the present-day Rowley Shoals (Mermaid, Clerke and Imperieuse reefs, as well as a drowned shoal to the southwest of Imperieuse Reef) continued to grow after this event. Growth of the Rowley Shoals reefs continued to keep pace with Pliocene-Recent sea-level changes, whereas the surrounding shelf subsided to depths of 230–440 m. We conclude that initial reef growth in the Rowley Shoals region was controlled by transpressional reactivation and structuring of the Mermaid Fault Zone during the early stage of collision between the Australian and Eurasian plates. During this structural reactivation, seabed fault scarps and topographic highs likely provided ideal sites for the initiation of reef growth. The subsequent growth and selective demise of the reefs was controlled by the interplay of eustatic sea-level variations and differential subsidence resulting from continued structural reactivation of the Mermaid Fault Zone. In contrast to models proposed in other regions, there is no direct evidence that active or palaeo hydrocarbon seepage triggered or controlled growth of the Rowley Shoals reefs or their buried Miocene predecessors.


1920 ◽  
Vol 57 (10) ◽  
pp. 449-462 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. E. Tilley

THE basement platform of Southern Eyre Peninsula consists of a series of igneous and metamorphic rocks of pre-Cambrianage. Rising from beneath the Mesozoic and Tertiary strata of the Nullarbor plains, they may be regarded as a south-easterly prolongation of the great pre-Cambrian Shield of Western Australia. The platform is for the most part within a few hundred feet of sea-level, and large areas of the region are covered by the products of long-continued weathering of the older rocks or by siliceous deposits of late Tertiary age. The best sections for geological study are those exposed along the coastline, and in the hilly areas of Hutchison and Warrow.


2021 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 73-74
Author(s):  
Aswan Aswan

The journey began in the Eocene with the presence of mollusk fossil in the Nanggulan Formation (near Yogyakarta) in Central Java. Many experts believe this was the early part of the Tethys system which might still be connected to the Tethys system in Europe.The oldest mollusk fossils type locality after Nanggulan is the Early Miocene Jonggrangan Formation in Kulon Progo near the city of Yogyakarta, which is dominated by the gastropod Haustator specimen. Molluscan paleontological studies of this type of locality reflect a restricted environment with less influence of the Tethyan system. Haustator are considered as the ancestor of the Turritellidae group, which is found mostly on Java Island, during the younger Tertiary to Quaternary Periods.The story continued to the Middle Miocene where the Tethyan realms indication was clearly observed by the presence of some typical Tethys species such as Volema and Babylonia from Nyalindung Formation, West Java. The regional sea level rise in this epoch (around 12 Ma) that was indicated by the presence of Vicarya as an index fossil, which occurrence was due to land submerging to become mangroves area. The fossil then quickly become extinct when the sea level dropped back.Late Miocene to Pliocene was like the transition period from the Tethyan realm to the Pacific realm, where the Tethyan fauna was no longer present. Only evolutional traces of the Middle Miocene mollusk fossils were observed. This continuous evolution is most clearly seen in Turritella cramatensis (late Miocene), Turritella acuticarinata (early Pliocene) and Turritella cikumpaiensis (late Pliocene) which was interpreted to have originated from Turritella angulata as their ancestors.Earth cooling environment that happened in the late Pliocene/early Pleistocene has led the diversity and evolution of a new group of mollusks, most clearly observed from the abundance of Turritella bantamensis in the Bojong Formation, Banten. The new Turritella group has a curved whorl that different from its predecessor with an angled whorl shape.Plio-Pleistocene tectonics event has ended the period of Java marine mollusks domination, then only freshwater mollusk fossils can be found in almost all Quaternary mollusks-bearing deposits. 


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gustav Pallisgaard-Olesen ◽  
Vivi Kathrine Pedersen ◽  
Natalya Gomez

<div> <p>The landscape in western Scandinavia has undergone dramatic changes through numerous glaciations during the Quaternary. These changes in topography and in the volumes of offshore sediment deposits, have caused significant isostatic adjustments and local sea level changes, owing to erosional unloading and depositional loading of the lithosphere. Mass redistribution from erosion and deposition also has the potential to cause significant pertubations of the geoid, resulting in additional sea-level changes. The combined sea-level response from these processes, is yet to be investigated in detail for Scandinavia.</p> </div><div> <p>In this study we estimate the total sea level change from late-Pliocene- Quaternary glacial erosion and deposition in the Scandinavian region, using a gravitationally self-consistent global sea level model that includes the full viscoelastic response of the solid Earth to surface loading and unloading. In addition to the total late Pliocene-Quaternary mass redistribution, we <span>also </span>estimate transient sea level changes related specifically to the two latest glacial cycles.</p> </div><div> <p>We utilize existing observations of offshore sediment thicknesses of glacial origin, and combine these with estimates of onshore glacial erosion and estimates of erosion on the inner shelf. Based on these estimates, we can define mass redistribution and construct a preglacial landscape setting.</p> </div><div> <p>Our preliminary results show <span>perturbations of</span> the local sea level up to ∼ 200 m since<span> the</span> late-Pliocene in the Norwegian Sea, suggesting that erosion and deposition ha<span>ve</span> influenced the local paleo sea level history in Scandinavia significantly.</p> </div>


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Ainul Labib ◽  
Agung Suprianto ◽  
Devi Prasetyo ◽  
Aan Seftian Hardianto ◽  
Alfi Sahrina ◽  
...  

Bagus-Jebrot Cave is located in Donomulyo District, Malang Regency which is in the Wonosari Formation which was formed in the Middle Miocene and Late Miocene. The purpose of this study is related to the developmental control that affects the cave passageways. The approach used is a geomorphological approach by conducting field measurements and documentation. The analysis used is frequency analysis and cross-section of the passage. Bagus-Jebrot Cave is a type of Epigenic Cave which is formed from surface water flowing into doline/sinkhole. It can be seen from the planview map that has a curvilinear passage pattern. The existence of groundwater flow also forms a physiographic cave passage with ellipse passage formation, asymmetrical ellipse, potholes, callops, solution notches, cups, solution pockets. Besides underground water flow, the development of the Bagus-Jebrot Cave aisle is related to the process of structural lifting and control. The lifting process is marked by the formation of 4 levels of the cave passage. While the formation of the canyon, joint passage, rectangular passage and keyhole is the result of structural control


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tihana Dević ◽  
Jadranka Šepić ◽  
Darko Koračin

<p>An objective method for tracking pathways of cyclone centres over Europe was developed and applied to the ERA-Interim reanalysis atmospheric data (1979-2014). The method was used to determine trajectories of those Mediterranean cyclones which generated extreme sea levels along the northern and the eastern Adriatic coast during the period from 1979 to 2014. Extreme events were defined as periods during which sea level was above 99.95 percentile value of time series of hourly sea-level data measured at the Venice (northern Adriatic), Split (middle eastern Adriatic) and Dubrovnik (south-eastern Adriatic) tide-gauge stations. The cyclone pathways were tracked backwards from the moment closest to the moment of maximum sea level up to the cyclone origin time, or at most, up to 72 hours prior the occurrence of the sea-level maximum.</p><p>Our results point out that extreme sea levels in Venice normally appear during synoptic situations in which a cyclone centre is located to the south-west and north-west of Venice, i.e., when it can be found over the Gulf of Genoa, or the Alps. On the contrary, extreme sea levels in Dubrovnik are usually associates with cyclone centres above the middle Adriatic, whereas floods in Split seem to appear during both above-described types of situations.</p><p>Occurrence times and intensity of cyclones and extreme sea-levels was further associated with the NAO index. It has been shown that the deepest cyclones and corresponding extreme floods tend to occur during the negative NAO phase.   </p>


2012 ◽  
Vol 54-55 ◽  
pp. 192-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhengquan Yao ◽  
Zhengtang Guo ◽  
Guoqiao Xiao ◽  
Qiang Wang ◽  
Xuefa Shi ◽  
...  

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