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Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

MESOZOIC TECTONICS OF THE OTWAY BASIN REGION: THE LEGACY OF GONDWANA AND THE ACTVE PACIFIC MARGIN—A REVIEW AND ONGOING RESEARCH

K.A. Hill, D.M. Finlayson, K.C. Hill and G.T. Cooper

The APPEA Journal 35(1) 467 - 493
Published: 1995

Abstract

Mesozoic extension along Australia's southern margin and the evolution and architecture of the Otway Basin were probably controlled by three factors: 1) changes in global plate movements driven by mantle processes; 2) the structural grain of Palaeozoic basement; and, 3) changes in subduction along Gondwana's Pacific margin. Major plate realignments controlled the Jurassic onset of rifting, the mid-Cretaceous break-up and the Eocene onset of rapid spreading in the Southern Ocean.

The initial southern margin rift site was influenced by the northern limit of Pacific margin (extensional) Jurassic dolerites and the rifting may have terminated dolerite emplacement. Changed conditions of Pacific margin subduction (e.g. ridge subduction) in the Aptian may have placed the Australia-Antarctic plates into minor compression, abating Neocomian southern margin rifting. It also produced vast amounts of volcanolithic sediment from the Pacific margin arc that was funnelled down the rift graben, causing additional regional subsidence due to loading. Albian orogenic collapse of the Pacific margin, related to collision with the Phoenix Plate, influenced mid-Cretaceous breakup propagating south of Tasmania and into the Tasman Sea.

Major offsets of the spreading axis during breakup, at the Tasman and Spencer Fracture zones, were most likely controlled by the location of Palaeozoic terrane boundaries. The Tasman Fracture System was reactivated during break-up, with considerable uplift and denudation of the Bass failed rift to the east, which controlled Otway Basin facies distribution. Palaeozoic structures also had a significant effect in determining the half graben orientations within a general N-S extensional regime during early Cretaceous rifting. The late Cretaceous second stage of rifting, seaward of the Tartwaup, Timboon and Sorell fault zones, left a stable failed rift margin to the north, but the attenuated lithosphere of the Otway-Sorell microplate to the south records repeated extension that led to continental separation and may be part of an Antarctic upper plate.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ94030

© CSIRO 1995

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