Sedimentary Basins and Crustal Processes at Continental Margins: From Modern Hyper-extended Margins to Deformed Ancient Analogues

Continental margins and their fossilized analogues are important repositories of natural resources. With better processing techniques and increased availability of high-resolution seismic and potential field data, imaging of present-day continental margins and their embedded sedimentary basins has reached unprecedented levels of refinement and definition, as illustrated by examples described in this volume. This, in turn, has led to greatly improved geological, geodynamic and numerical models for the crustal and mantle processes involved in continental margin formation from the initial stages of rifting through continental rupture and break-up to development of a new ocean basin. Further informing these models, and contributing to a better understanding of the features imaged in the seismic and potential field data, are observations made on fossilized fragments of exhumed subcontinental mantle lithosphere and ocean–continent transition zones preserved in ophiolites and orogenic belts of both Palaeozoic and Mesozoic age from several different continents, including Europe, South Asia and Australasia.
The contribution of offshore seismic data to understanding the evolution of the New Zealand continent
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Published:January 01, 2015
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CiteCitation
Chris Uruski, 2015. "The contribution of offshore seismic data to understanding the evolution of the New Zealand continent", Sedimentary Basins and Crustal Processes at Continental Margins: From Modern Hyper-extended Margins to Deformed Ancient Analogues, G. M. Gibson, F. Roure, G. Manatschal
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Abstract
- Alpine Fault
- Australasia
- Australian Plate
- back-arc basins
- basement
- basin analysis
- basins
- Cenozoic
- Chatham Rise
- Cretaceous
- deltaic sedimentation
- fluvial sedimentation
- geophysical methods
- geophysical profiles
- geophysical surveys
- Gondwana
- Great South Basin
- Kermadec Trench
- Mesozoic
- microcontinents
- Murihiku Supergroup
- New Caledonia Basin
- New Zealand
- North Island
- Northland New Zealand
- Pacific Ocean
- Pacific Plate
- paleogeography
- petrography
- plate boundaries
- plate rotation
- plate tectonics
- Raukumara Peninsula
- reconstruction
- reflection methods
- rifting
- sediment transport
- sedimentary basins
- sedimentation
- seismic methods
- seismic profiles
- South Island
- South Pacific
- Southwest Pacific
- subduction
- subduction zones
- surveys
- Taranaki Basin
- Torlesse Supergroup
- transport
- two-dimensional models
- West Pacific
- Hikurangi Plateau
- Reinga Basin
- Bounty Basin