4.4 Article

Two-phase Cretaceous-Paleocene rifting in the Taranaki Basin region, New Zealand; implications for Gondwana break-up

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY
Volume 174, Issue 5, Pages 929-946

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC PUBL HOUSE
DOI: 10.1144/jgs2016-160

Keywords

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Funding

  1. New Zealand's sedimentary basins, as part of the Petroleum Basin Research (PBR)
  2. Atlas of Petroleum Prospectivity (APP)
  3. MBIE
  4. 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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