Geochemistry of the low‐grade Early Proterozoic sedimentary sequence in the Pine Creek Geosyncline, Northern Territory

1985 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. R. Ewers ◽  
R. S. Needham ◽  
P. G. Stuart‐Smith ◽  
I. H. Crick
2006 ◽  
Vol 2006 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-4 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.E. Worden ◽  
C.J. Carson ◽  
I.R. Scrimgeour ◽  
J.H. Lally ◽  
N.J. Doyle

1989 ◽  
Vol 145 ◽  
pp. 90-97
Author(s):  
N Henriksen ◽  
J.D Friderichsen ◽  
R.A Strachan ◽  
N.J Soper ◽  
A.K Higgins

The area between Grandjean Fjord and Bessel Fjord was the focus in 1988 of regional geological investigations and 1:500000 mapping during the North-East Greenland project (Henriksen, 1989). The greater part of the area forms part of the East Greenland Caledonides and can be divided into three distinct rock groups: infracrustal gneisses and granites of possibie Archaean or early Proterozoic origin; a metasedimentary sequence which has probably suffered both mid-Proterozoic and Caledonian migmatisation and metamorphism; and the late Proterozoic Eleonore Bay Group, a thick sedimentary sequence which has undergone amphibolite facies Caledonian metamorphism in its lower parts and is intruded by Caledonian granites. Aspects of the stratigraphy and sedimentology of the Eleonore Bay Group are described by Sønderholm et al. (1989); only the structures affecting the sequence are described here.


1989 ◽  
Vol 126 (6) ◽  
pp. 675-679 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Evans

AbstractThe Bwlch y Cywion microgranite intrudes an Ordovician sedimentary sequence in northeast Snowdonia, North Wales. Its age is recorded by hornfelses within its metamorphic aureole which give an Ordovician age of 454 ± 20 Ma. The whole-rock Rb–Sr isotope systems of the intrusion, however, and of an associated ash-flow tuff and a rhyolite of the Llewelyn Volcanic Group (Caradoc), were reset during low-grade metamorphism and give Devonian ages of 392±11 Ma, 392±5 Ma, and 405 ± 6 Ma, respectively.


1993 ◽  
Vol 84 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. J. Soper ◽  
A. K. Higgins

AbstractThe Eleonore Bay Supergroup (EBG) is a 16 km-thick shallow-water sequence of Neoproterozoic age that is preserved within the East Greenland Caledonides in several tracts, surrounded by crystalline gneisses and schistose supracrustal rocks. The apparent downward transition from non-metamorphic EBG into gneiss gave rise to the classic ‘stockwerke’ hypothesis, in which all the metamorphism was regarded as Caledonian, and differences in grade were ascribed to the ascent of a migmatite front to different levels within the orogen. Field and isotopic studies in the 1970s however revealed that the underlying gneisses and schists had undergone orogenic reworking in mid-Proterozoic time; the EBG–basement contact was then interpreted as an approximately bedding-parallel décollement with apparent lag geometry, that is with EBG cover rocks in its hangingwall.Recent work in the northernmost EBG tract, at Ardencaple Fjord, has shed light on the problems posed by the basal relationships of the EBG, and together with regional structural and stratigraphic data leads to the following interpretation. There are two regionally important basement-cover interfaces within the East Greenland Caledonides. The earlier one is between Archaean/early Proterozoic gneisses and early Proterozoic supracrustal rocks, which were pervasively deformed in mid-Proterozoic time and form the basement to the Neoproterozoic Eleonore Bay cover sequence. This was deposited on a vast, continually subsiding shelf that is now preserved in East and NE Greenland and Svalbard, and contains Grenville detritus. EBG deposition was terminated by major extensional faulting of Vendian age; the succeeding Tillite Group is interpreted as a syn-rift sequence, presumably associated with the opening of Iapetus.The EBG–basement contacts that are not late faults are inferred to be extensional shear zones of Vendian age. These were reactivated in compression during the Caledonian orogeny in the Silurian, with metamorphic and fabric convergence, which accounts for the apparent downward transition from sedimentary rocks through schists into gneisses. Caledonian shortening was not large; inversion of the Vendian grabens was incomplete, so that the marginal shear zones retained their lag geometry and large tracts of low grade Eleonore Bay sediments are preserved at the present erosion level, surrounded by Proterozoic basement rocks, within the Caledonian belt of East Greenland.


1990 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 107 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Bradshaw ◽  
Robert S. Nicoll ◽  
Marita Bradshaw

The Arafura Basin is on the northern margin of Australia, extending north towards New Guinea and contains a thick Cambrian to Permo-Triassic sedimentary sequence. The basin consists of a broad northern platform, a northwest trending graben, the Goulburn Graben (new name), and a southern platform that extends onshore into the Northern Territory. The basin sediments unconform- ably overlie the Proterozoic McArthur Basin and are overlain by mid-Jurassic and younger sediments of the Money Shoal Basin. The Palaeozoic section in the Goulburn Graben is over 10 km thick, while on the northern and southern platforms half that thickness is preserved.During the Cambrian and Ordovician the Arafura Basin was a stable platform dominated by carbonate deposition. The Late Devonian and Late Carboniferous aged sediments are marine and non-marine clastics with minor carbonates. Initial movement of the graben bounding faults occurred in the early Carboniferous, but the major graben development and deformation occurred in the Permo-Triassic and was associated with westward tilting.The six exploration wells in the basin have all been sited on structural targets along the Goulburn Graben. There were oil shows in most wells and four source rock intervals were intersected, but reservoir quality and fault seal were identified as major risks. The majority of the Cambrian and Permo-Triassic sequences remain untested and extensive areas of the basin outside the graben are virtually unexplored. Thermal maturation studies indicate a low geothermal gradient and that the greater part of the Palaeozoic sequence is prospective for hydrocarbons.


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