Cavalli Seamount, Northland Plateau, SW Pacific Ocean; a Miocene metamorphic core complex?
Cavalli Seamount, Northland Plateau, SW Pacific Ocean; a Miocene metamorphic core complex?
Journal of the Geological Society of London (November 2003) 160 (6): 971-983
- absolute age
- Australasia
- biostratigraphy
- Cenozoic
- Cretaceous
- crustal thickening
- crustal thinning
- dates
- dredged samples
- exhumation
- Foraminifera
- Invertebrata
- Mesozoic
- metamorphic core complexes
- metamorphic rocks
- metamorphism
- microfossils
- mineral assemblages
- Miocene
- Neogene
- nesosilicates
- New Zealand
- North Island
- Northland New Zealand
- ocean floors
- orthosilicates
- Pacific Ocean
- Paleogene
- Protista
- protoliths
- schists
- seamounts
- silicates
- South Pacific
- Southwest Pacific
- tectonics
- Tertiary
- U/Pb
- Upper Cretaceous
- West Pacific
- zircon
- zircon group
- Cavalli Seamount
- Northland Plateau
Cavalli Seamount (34 degrees 06'S, 174 degrees 10'E) is an irregular-shaped, flat-topped seamount on the Northland Plateau, SW Pacific Ocean. In contrast to Miocene lavas recovered from other seamounts in the area, the rocks dredged from Cavalli Seamount consist of biotite schist, with minor calc-silicate bands. Mineralogy, whole-rock chemistry, U-Pb dating of detrital zircons, and Sr and Nd isotopic composition collectively indicate a siliciclastic-carbonate protolith of latest Cretaceous to Paleogene stratigraphic age. Metamorphic index minerals are sillimanite, andesine, garnet, ilmenite and K-feldspar, and indicate peak P-T conditions of c. 650 degrees C and c. 0.4 GPa. U-Pb, Ar/Ar and fission-track dating of minerals, and micropalaeontological dating of associated limestones, indicate rapid cooling in the interval 23-21 Ma. The schist contains chloritized and hematized slickenslides parallel to a penetrative lineation, s-c planes and conjugate microfractures, and has limestone geopetal infillings parallel to foliation. These features are consistent with the interpretation of Cavalli Seamount as part of the lower plate of an Early Miocene metamorphic core complex. Although other explanations are possible, the core complex interpretation fits with regional Early Miocene events including crustal thickening as a result of allochthon emplacement in northern New Zealand, crustal thinning associated with rapid extension in the South Fiji Basin, Pacific trench rollback, and abundant Early Miocene igneous activity.