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Eocene and Oligocene basins and ridges of the Coral Sea‐New Caledonia region: Tectonic link between Melanesia, Fiji, and Zealandia
Author(s) -
Mortimer Nick,
Gans Phillip B.,
Palin J. Michael,
Herzer Richard H.,
Pelletier Bernard,
Monzier Michel
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
tectonics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.465
H-Index - 134
eISSN - 1944-9194
pISSN - 0278-7407
DOI - 10.1002/2014tc003598
Subject(s) - geology , paleontology , ophiolite , ridge , island arc , subduction , plate tectonics , back arc basin , tectonics
This paper presents 34 geochemical analyses, 24 Ar‐Ar ages, and two U‐Pb ages of igneous rocks from the back‐arc basins and submarine ridges in the Coral Sea‐New Caledonia region. The D'Entrecasteaux Ridge is a composite structural feature. Primitive arc tholeiites of Eocene age (34–56 Ma) are present along a 200 km length of the ridge and arguably were part of the initial line of subduction inception between Fiji and the Marianas; substantial Eocene arc edifices are only evident at the eastern end where Bougainville Guyot andesite breccias are dated at 40 ± 2 Ma. The South Rennell Trough is confidently identified as a 28–29 Ma (early Oligocene) fossil spreading ridge, and hence, the flanking Santa Cruz and D'Entrecasteaux basins belong in the group of SW Pacific Eocene‐Early Miocene back‐arc basins that include the Solomon Sea, North Loyalty, and South Fiji basins. The rate and duration of spreading in the North Loyalty Basin is revised to 43 mm/yr between 28 and 44 Ma, longer and faster than previously recognized. The direction of its opening was to the southeast, that is, parallel to the continent‐ocean boundary and perpendicular to the direction of coeval New Caledonia ophiolite emplacement. Medium‐ and high‐K alkaline lavas of 23–25 Ma (late Oligocene) age on the northern Norfolk Ridge are an additional magmatic response to Pacific trench rollback.