Extensional fault-related folding of the North West shelf, Western Australia

AAPG Bulletin ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 104 (4) ◽  
pp. 913-938
Author(s):  
Sam McHarg ◽  
Chris Elders ◽  
Jane Cunneen
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Darren Cheah ◽  
Kliti Grice ◽  
Cornelia Wuchter ◽  
Alan G. Scarlett ◽  
Marco J. L. Coolen

1994 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 555
Author(s):  
N. M. Lemon ◽  
T. Mahmood

The North West Shelf of Western Australia is an area of known extensional control with a number of inbuilt complexities related to variations in direction of extension and the existence of early fracture sets. Analogue modelling in a sandbox of modest construction and proportions can imitate the style of structures imaged by seismic on the North West Shelf. Models were constructed to simulate deformation in a sedimentary sequence above simple listric, ramp/flat and complex 3D detachment surfaces. A new 3D technique has been devised to simulate progressive deformation above complex detachment morphologies. Analysis of the structures produced has been achieved by marrying sequential plan view photographs of the model surface with serial vertical sections of the bulk of the model once the experiment has been completed and the sand stabilised. This technique also has the ability to simulate geometry and kinematics of extensional structures in a complex polyphase area. This 3D technique has proven particularly useful in the understanding of structures developed in regions where the sedimentary sequence has been subject to more than one period of extension, each with different orientations. The models provide the first understanding of the areal distribution of fault patterns and associated subsidiary troughs in areas of complex detachments. These models show the distribution of pre-rift and syn-rift sediments in extensional terranes and are valuable in the prediction of deformation in areas of poor seismic quality and for confirmation of seismic interpretation.


1985 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 247 ◽  
Author(s):  
SJM Blaber ◽  
JW Young ◽  
MC Dunning

The species composition and broad trophic structure of the mangrove creek and open shore fish communities of the Dampier region in tropical north-western Australia are described. The habitats are characterized by a lack of freshwater influence, low turbidity and a tidal range in excess of 4 m. Both mangroves and open shores have a diversity of species typical of Indo-west Pacific coastal waters but the physical conditions have modified the community structure both to exclude many families that prefer areas of higher turbidity and reduced salinity, and to include others that usually occur only in clear waters. The fish faunas of the mangroves (113 species) and open shores (106 species) are compared: 54 species were common to both. The deeper waters were dominated by piscivores, which penetrated throughout the mangroves at high tide. Iliophagous species were abundant, particularly in the mangroves where the organic content of the substratum (7.8-8.2%) was not reduced markedly compared with other areas of the Indo-Pacific, despite the lack of freshwater inflow. The clear and deep water in the mangroves at high tide favour predation on juveniles by piscivorous fishes and reduce the effectiveness of such areas as nurseries. There is virtually no overlap of the fauna with that of the deeper waters (>20 m) of the North West Shelf, and the inshore region is not a significant nursery ground for any of the commercially important deeper water species.


1998 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan Dench

This paper discusses evidence of an early pidgin in use amongst Aboriginal people of the north west coast of Western Australia. The crucial evidence comes from an Italian manuscript describing the rescue, by local Aborigines, of two castaways wrecked on North West Cape in 1875. The data reveals that the local Aborigines attempted to communicate with the Italian-speaking survivors using what appears to be an Australian language spoken some 300 kilometers further along the coast, around the emerging center of the new Pilbara pearling industry. I present an analysis of the material, showing that it differs from Australian languages of the area in significant ways and can be considered a reduced variety. I conclude that this variety is an indigenous pidgin — the first to be described for Australia.


2021 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 119-123
Author(s):  
Marcus Singor

All Australian records of the Eurasian Hobby Falco subbuteo are summarised. Before 2016, the only Australian records of the Eurasian Hobby were on external territories to the north-west of the mainland. Each year between 2016 and 2021 a single Eurasian Hobby was observed as an austral summer visitor to the Swan Coastal Plain in south-western Western Australia. These sightings involved an adult in 2016, 2019 and 2020, and single immature birds in 2017–2018. The age of the Hobby seen in 2020–2021 was undetermined. As it appears that multiple individuals have been recorded across years, it is likely that the species is now more than just an accidental vagrant to Australia.


Author(s):  
Edward S. Simpson

The Pilbara goldfield lies in the north-west division of Western Australia within the tropics, and has been described in considerable detail by A. Gibb Maitland in Bulletin 40 of the Geological Survey of Western Australia. Though the chief mineral product at present is gold, the district abounds in other economic minerals, notably ores of copper and tin, and has already become famous as being by far the most important producer of tantalum in the world, the chief source of supply of this metal being the manganotantalite of Wodgina.


Author(s):  
Briony Mamo ◽  
Willem Renema ◽  
Cecilia McHugh ◽  
Stephen Gallagher ◽  
Craig Fulthorpe ◽  
...  

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