Journal
JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY
Volume 174, Issue 5, Pages 929-946Publisher
GEOLOGICAL SOC PUBL HOUSE
DOI: 10.1144/jgs2016-160
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Funding
- New Zealand's sedimentary basins, as part of the Petroleum Basin Research (PBR)
- Atlas of Petroleum Prospectivity (APP)
- MBIE
- New Zealand Government (Ministry for Business, Innovation and Enterprise)
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The break-up of Gondwana resulted in extension of New Zealand continental crust during the Cretaceous-Paleocene. Offshore the geometry and rift history are well imaged by new regional mapping of a large seismic reflection dataset, tied to wells, used here to document the Cretaceous-Paleocene (c. 105-55 Ma) evolution of the greater Taranaki Basin region. Two temporally distinct phases of rifting have been recognized in the region, and record Gondwana break-up. The first (Zealandia rift phase) produced half-grabens trending NW to WNW during the mid-Cretaceous (c. 105-83 Ma). These rift basins predate, and are parallel to, Tasman Sea spreading centres. They record distributed stretching of northern Zealandia prior to the onset of seafloor spreading in the Tasman Sea. A short period (c. 83-80 Ma) of uplift and erosion followed, possibly representing a break-up unconformity, with erosion in southern Taranaki Basin and deposition of the 'Taranaki Delta' sequence in Deepwater Taranaki. The second, West Coast-Taranaki rift phase produced north-to NE-trending extensional half-grabens in the shelfal Taranaki Basin during the latest Cretaceous-Paleocene (c. 80-55 Ma). This rift was narrow (< 150 km wide), orthogonal to Zealandia phase rifting, affected mainly western Zealandia and did not progress to full break-up.
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