2014 GSA Annual Meeting in Vancouver, British Columbia (19–22 October 2014)

Paper No. 140-2
Presentation Time: 9:15 AM

MIOCENE DEEP-WATER DEPOSITION BY A SUBMARINE VOLCANIC ARC: MOHAKATINO FORMATION, TARANAKI BASIN, NEW ZEALAND


SHUMAKER, Lauren E., Geological and Environmental Sciences, Stanford University, 450 Serra Mall, Bldg 320, Rm. 118, Stanford, CA 94305 and GRAHAM, Stephan A., Department of Geological Sciences, Stanford University, 450 Serra Mall, Bldg. 320, Stanford, CA 94305-2115

The mid-Miocene Mohakatino Formation of the Taranaki Basin, New Zealand, is a submarine fan succession sourced dominantly from an offshore, submarine andesitic arc. The ~100 m-thick formation, exposed over ~30 km of coastline, is strongly tabular, with minimal evidence for erosion and cm- to m-scale beds persisting in thickness for many kilometers laterally. This submarine fan is unique in the Taranaki Basin for its combination of deposition by sediment gravity flows and ash-fall settling, the dominance of coarse-grained sand to gravel-sized grains, and the minimal clay content. This stands in contrast to the interfingering and overlying, fine-grained siliciclastic Mount Messenger Formation, which is a well-documented example of deep-water channels and lobes.

In 165 m of section, measured at the cm scale, we document five lithofacies. LF1 is cm-bedded, poorly sorted sandstone, with subset LF1a showing coarse-tail grading and LF1b showing normal grading. LF1a is interpreted as lag deposits from bypassing, high-density turbidity currents, while LF1b represents passive settling of ash through the water column. LF2 is thick-bedded, normally graded, dewatered, massive sandstone, deposited by collapsing, unconfined high-density turbidity currents. Coarse-grained dune sets (LF3) are interpreted as elements of a small deep-water channel. LF4 and LF5 are quartz-rich siltstone and fine sandstone, suggesting a terrigenous source, and are attributed to the Mount Messenger Formation.

The character of these lithofacies and the non-erosive nature of the deposits indicate a lobe environment, where flows lose confinement and are dominantly depositional. The spatial distribution of the lithofacies suggests a fan system sourced from the north and oriented axial to an elongate basin, confined by a growing volcanic arc to the north and west and a fault-controlled topographic high to the east. This is supported by dating of the volcanic arc showing dominant activity north of the deposits at 12-8 Ma (Giba et al., 2013), and by paleocurrent indicators that suggest largely W- or SW-directed flows. Characterizing this unique formation in the context of the well-studied Mount Messenger Fm. provides an opportunity to document the interaction of distinct, coeval depositional systems in a deep-water basin.