Provenance and Tectonics of the Allochthonous New Guinea Terranes: Implications for the Formation and Evolution of Regional Basins, #11319 (2020)

semanticscholar(2020)

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Abstract
Papua New Guinea resides in a complex tectonic junction between the Australian continent, the Southwest Pacific, and Southeast Asia. Resolving the plate tectonic evolution of this region has proven difficult to date due to the plethora of contradicting geologic models that stem from a lack of constraining regional datasets. A growing body of geochronologic, geochemical and isotopic data acquired over the past decade, combined with new field observations, has led to a progressive shift from a largely autochthonous terrane model, to one of allochthonous terranes and accretion at the northern Australian continental margin. Findings from a compilation of zircon and biostratigraphic age data throughout the Papuan Peninsula and the New Guinea Fold and Thrust, and Mobile Belts, extending west to the Bird’s Head of West Papua, provide a robust evidence-based provenance model for the origin of these terranes. The evaluation of inherited and detrital zircon age populations indicates that many of the terranes are allochthonous in nature and that existing tectonic reconstructions require major revision. For example, a reconstruction that infers a North Queensland provenance for clastic rocks of the Papuan Peninsula based on closure of the Coral Sea is no longer supported by the available data. Instead, some of the allochthonous terranes are now interpreted to be derived from eastern Australia, with provenance of the Papuan Peninsula more akin to that of New Caledonia than North Queensland.
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