The Nature of Shear Zones Formed During Extension in Eastern Papua New Guinea

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 1236 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1990
Abstract
Goodenough and Fergusson Islands, in eastern PapuaNew Guinea, lie in an area of crustal extension on the western end of the Woodlark Basin seafloor spreading system. The islands are made up of a number of mountainous domes of complexely deformed basement, and these are intruded by large bodies of granodiorite. The domes are bounded by curved shear zones and faults dipping outwards at angles of around 25 to 45¦. The cores of the domes contain lower crustal rocks of eclogite and granulite facies, these rocks have undergone retrograde metamorphism in the outer sheared zones. Movement indicators on the shear zones indicate a complex moverm.-It geometry which does not fit the models proposed by earlier workers. These dome-like structures are similar to the metamorphic core complexes of the western United States Cordilleran region, however there are a number of aspects which do not fit with the models proposed for the development of metamorphic core complexes. Uplift of the metamorphic basement probably resulted from a combination of forces associated with the extension of the crust and the intrusion and emplacement of granodiorite plutons.
Citation
APA: (1990) The Nature of Shear Zones Formed During Extension in Eastern Papua New Guinea
MLA: The Nature of Shear Zones Formed During Extension in Eastern Papua New Guinea. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1990.