Geology of eastern Papua
Geology of eastern Papua
Geological Society of America Bulletin (December 1971) 82 (12): 3299-3312
Eastern Papua is a southeasterly trending mountainous peninsula with islands to the east and southeast, between 7 degrees to 12 degrees S. and 146 degrees to 155 degrees E. The peninsula and islands consist of a linear core of Mesozoic sialic metamorphic rocks flanked by Mesozoic and younger mafic rocks, and partly concealed by still younger sedimentary and volcanic rocks. The Mesozoic sialic rocks are exposed in a belt 900 km long and up to 60 km wide. They consist of Cretaceous (and possibly older) sediments which were metamorphosed during the Paleocene or Eocene. Metamorphic grade is generally greenschist facies, but is higher in the D'Entrecasteaux Islands and on part of Misima Island; lawsonite occurs mainly within a few kilometers of the Owen Stanley fault which bounds the mainland metamorphics on the north and northeast. Mesozoic mafic rocks include peridotite, gabbro and basalt of the Papuan ultramafic belt, metabasalt exposed in the Suckling-Dayman mountain block and on Normanby and the Deboyne Islands, and unmetamorphosed basalt elsewhere on the mainland. These rocks are, at least in part, Cretaceous. Younger mafic rocks include Eocene basalt on the southeastern mainland, and upper Oligocene and lower and middle Miocene tuff and lava at scattered localities. Eocene sediments consist of chert and deep-water limestone along the south coast of the mainland at Port Moresby and Magarida, and Eocene clastic sediments inland from Port Moresby and near Tapini. No lower or middle Oligocene rocks are known. Upper Oligocene, Miocene and Pliocene sediments in the Aure Trough (145 degrees to 146 degrees E.) have a maximum thickness of about 12,000 m; the sediments are mainly alternating mudstone and graywacke, and are probably turbidites. Middle Miocene reef limestone on the eastern hinge line of the trough at 146 degrees E. is 1,000 m thick. Middle Miocene and younger clastic sediments in the Cape Vogel Basin (150 degrees E.) are at least 4,000 m thick. Pliocene and Quaternary volcanic rocks range in composition from basalt to rhyolite and include some potash-rich rocks. Intrusive rocks include Eocene tonalite in the ultramafic belt, Oligocene? gabbro near Port Moresby, middle Miocene granodiorite west of Salamaua, middle Miocene potash-rich intrusives on the southeastern mainland, Pliocene andesitic porphyries near Wau, and Pliocene granodiorite in the D'Entrecasteaux Islands.