GSA 2020 Connects Online

Paper No. 157-3
Presentation Time: 6:00 PM

INDICATORS OF EPEIROGENIC UPLIFT OF THE CANTERBURY BASIN, SOUTH ISLAND, NEW ZEALAND


DVORAK, Katherine, Western Michigan University, Geological and Environmental Studies, 1903 West Michigan Ave, Kalamazoo, MI 49008, KOMINZ, Michelle, Western Michigan University, Geological and Environmental Studies, 1903 W. Michigan Ave, Kalamazoo, MI 49008, FULTHORPE, Craig, Institute for Geophysics, Jackson School of Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin, 10100 Burnet Road, Austin, TX 78758-4445 and CRUNDWELL, Martin P., GNS Science, 1 Fairway Drive, Avalon, Lower Hutt, 5040, New Zealand

The Canterbury Basin (South Island, New Zealand) is a passive margin that formed after rifting of Zealandia from Gondwana at ~83Ma (Cande and Stock, 2004). IODP expedition 317 cores from Sites U1351, U1353, and 1U352 have been resampled and analyzed with emphasis on benthic foraminifera and trace fossils from the Late Eocene to the Present (Crundwell, 2014, Browning, pers. comm.). Using revised water depth and age data from these sites and from the Clipper-1 well, a new basin subsidence model has been generated for the Canterbury Basin. One-dimensional backstripping of the upper shelf wells is interpreted to have been influenced by significant downslope contamination, erosional/non-depositional events and low accommodation space. However, slope sites U1352 and Clipper-1 indicate possible uplift coupled with an erosional/non-depositional event that began at ~5.8 Ma and reached a minimum water depth by ∼3.7 Ma. During this time interval 2 sequences and 3 sequence boundaries are identified.

A possible explanation is epeirogenic uplift resulting from the migration of the South Island over a slab graveyard (Maruyama et al., 2007). In this model, water released from these slabs generated a Rayleigh-Taylor instability in the mantle lithosphere, causing the lithospheric mantle to drip or delaminate. This hypothesis explains the rapid uplift while preserving the passive margin geometry of the Canterbury Basin.

Cande, S.C. and Stock, J.M., 2004, Pacific –Antarctic-Australian motion and the formation of the Macquarie Plate, Geophysical Journal International, v.157, p.399-414.

Crundwell, M.P., 2014, Pliocene to Late Eocene foraminiferal and bolboformid biostratigraphy of IODP Hole 317-U1352C, Canterbury Basin, New Zealand, GNS Science Report 2014/15, 49p.

Maruyama, S., Santosh, M, Zhao, D., (2007), Superplume, supercontinent, and post-perovskite: Mantle dynamics and anti-plate tectonics on the Core–Mantle Boundary, Gondwana Research, v.11, pgs.7-37.