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Week 2 Mountain Building in the Red Centre We now have enough background to tell the story of the Red Centre. Mountain-building is called orogeny by the geologists. The Alice Springs Orogeny lasted from 450 million to 300 million years ago, producing, among others, the MacDonnell Ranges from 350 to 300 million years ago ago, during the Gondwanda and Pangaea supercontinent periods. The story begins with the formation of the Amadeus Basin in the coming together of the continent of Australia during the assembly of Columbia around 1.8 billion years ago. The Strangways mountain-building dates from this period. The eastern part of Australia (Tasmanides) did not exist. Geodynamic Synthesis of the Gawler Craton and Curnamona Province Geoscience Australia Record 2010/27 N. Kositcin (Ed.) During this period, the Gawler Craton in South Australia, the West Australian Craton and the North Australian Craton came together at a convergent plate boundary. The Amadeus Basin was formed as a foreland basin during the Stangway mountain-building episode. https://digital.library.adelaide.edu.au/dspace/handle/2440/16496 The continental shelves of the Gawler and North Australian Cratons came together, resulting in a sea, possibly open to the east, in what became the Amadeus Basin. Geology of The Amadeus Basin, Central Australia. Bulletin 100, Department of National Development, Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics, Commonwealth of Australia, 1970 Over time, the Amadeus Basin has accumulated sediments, up to 14 kilometres in some places. By comparison, Mount Everest is less than 9 kilometres high, and Alice Springs is 545 metres above sea level. Fourteen kilometres seems like a lot, but it was over a very long time. 10 kilometres is 10 million millimetres, which in a billion years amounts to 1 millimetre every 100 years. A house, left untended, would accumulate more than 1 millimetre of dust in a single year. The geological record shows long gaps in accumulation, and periods when the sediments have eroded. In addition, we need to keep in mind that the continents are floating on the oceanic crust, and that accumulation of sediment causes the basin to subside. For the first several hundred million years, the sediments would have come largely from the Strangways mountains, just to the north. The Petermann Ranges were formed 550 to 500 million years ago, during the assembly of Gonwanda. The mountains were built by large and relatively rapid movements of thrust faults, principally in the Woodroffe Thrust. These faults force older strata of rock above younger strata, by pressure from several directions. There seems to be no generally accepted direct cause of the episode. http://austhrutime.com/musgrave_block.htm http://www.ga.gov.au/corporate_data/81425/Jou1995_v16_n1-2_p147.pdf The ranges were then eroded, with vast fans of sand and gravel deposited, kilometres thick, in the Amadeus Basin. There were glacial episodes, and a long period in which the Amadeus basin was a sea, so there are many layers of marine sediments over the sand and gravel fans, contributing to the pressure that turned these, and earlier sediments, into rock. The rocks that were there when the basin formed are called the basement. These rocks today are mostly gneiss and granite. Gneiss is rock, sedimentary or igneous, that has been metamorphosised under high temperature and pressure. The pressure comes from the rocks lying below much sediment, while the temperature comes from the mantle, in the form of granite plumes and other forms of non-volcanic molten rock. These influences cause the rock to partially melt and re-crystallize, and leaves bands. Gneiss The lowest level of sediment is the Heavitree quartzite, 100 to 300 metres thick. Quartzite is metamorphosised sandstone. The backbone of the MacDonnell Ranges is Heavitree quartzite, as are the gorges at Ellery Creek Big Hole, Ormiston Gorge and Trephina Gorge, among others. http://lrm.nt.gov.au/water/ground/people/alice Corroboree Rock, East MacDonnells, is dolomite rock. The processes that created dolomite rock seem no longer to be operating. There are several competing theories as to how the vast deposits of dolomite around the world were formed, but they certainly involve marine sediments of microscopic shelled organisms. Most of the more recent layers are sandstone or siltstone, although there are a few limestone layers dating from more than 500 million years ago. We now have the machinery to tell the story of the Alice Springs landscape. The MacDonnell Ranges mountain-building process occurred while Australia was part of Gondwana, and while Gondwana was in process of colliding with Laurasia to form the supercontinent Pangaea. The direction of movement of Gondwana would have been from southeast to northwest in the Pangaea reconstruction, which is from north to south in the present orientation of Australia. The movement would have been powered by a push from a divergent plate boundary to the relative north. This push would have placed enormous stress on the Gondwana continent. This stress re-activated a pre-existing fault to the north-west of Alice Springs called the Redbank Shear Zone. BMR Journal of Australian Geology & Geophysics, 13, 1993, 359-368 This shear zone is very deep, going down to the bottom of the crust, 60 kilometres below the surface. Australian Journal of Earth Sciences No. 44(2), 215-226, 1997 The Earth’s crust shortened by about 50 kilometres during this event, lifting and folding the sediments under the Amadeus basin to form the MacDonnell Ranges. This folding has left the sediment layers nearly vertical. Geological Society of America Special Papers, 509, 2015 Since the formation of the ranges about 300 million years ago, Central Australia has been geologically fairly stable, so that the erosion processes have done their work, removing the softer upper sediments, leaving the hardest metamorphosised Heavitree quartzite, formed from the billion-year-old Strangways Range in the billion-year-old Amadeus Basin, that we can see now. Leaving also the exposed even older basement gneiss found at Alice Springs. The Finke River, which drained this mountain range, remains, occasionally returning to its former flow, most recently at Easter 1988, when the bridge on the Stuart Highway south of Alice Springs was under water. The whole Amadeus Basin was affected by the mountainbuilding period in which the MacDonnell ranges were formed. The sediments formed after the Petermann Ranges were involved. Uluru and Kata Tjuta are eroded remnants of the sand and gravel (respectively) fans which were uplifted and tilted in that process. But the southern Amadeus Basin mountains did not expose the deep layers that characterise the MacDonnell Ranges. After the formation of the MacDonnells, Gonwanda broke up. The first break was the separation of Africa and South America, which began about 184 million years ago, during the Jurassic, the age of dinosaurs. India and Madagascar began to break away and move northward about 120 million years ago, during the early Cretaceous, also during the dinosaur ages. The final break was the separation of Antarctica, beginning about 80 million years ago, during the late Cretaceous. The separation became complete about 55 million years ago, during the Eocene, when the early ancestors of modern mammals began to appear. The Red Centre became much dryer from this time. The Finke River system has not been permanently flowing for about 55 million years. Global climate change may have played a part on the drying out of the Centre. Australia has moved about 4000 kilometres to the northwest since the separation from Antarctica, about the distance from Kalgoorlie to Port Douglas. Evolution of the Climate 323.2–330.9 ma Pangea forming, MacDonnells Building. Rainforests covered the tropical regions of Pangea which was bounded to the north and south by deserts. An ice cap began to expand northward from the South Pole. 265-255 ma. Equatorial rainforest disappeared as deserts spread across central Pangea. Though the southern ice sheets were gone, an ice cap covered the North Pole. Rainforests covered South China as it crossed the Equator. 250ma MacDonnells at their peak. The interior of Pangea was hot and dry during the Triassic. Warm Temperate climates extended to the Poles. This may have been one of the hottest times in Earth history. Rapid Global Warming at the very end of the Permian may have created a super - "Hot House" world that caused the great Permo-Triassic extinction. 99% of all life on Earth perished during the Permo-Triassic extinction. 140ma The Early Cretaceous was a mild "Ice House" world. There was snow and ice during the winter seasons, and Cool Temperate forests covered the polar regions. 70ma. During the Late Cretaceous the global climate was warmer than today's climate. No ice existed at the Poles. Dinosaurs migrated between the Warm Temperate and Cool Temperate Zones as the seasons changed 61.6 – 59.2 ma. The climate during the Paleocene was much warmer than today. Palm trees grew in Greenland and Patagonia. The Mangrove swamps of southern Australia were located at 65 degrees south latitude. 34-38 mya. Global climate during the Late Eocene was warmer than today. Ice had just begun to form at the South Pole. India was covered by tropical rainforests, and Warm Temperate forests covered much of Australia. 23-34 mya. During the Oligocene, ice covered the South Pole but not the North Pole. Warm Temperate forests covered northern Eurasia and North America. 7-23 mya. The climate during the Miocene was similar to today's climate, but warmer. Well-defined climatic belts stretched from Pole to Equator, however, there were palm trees and alligators in England and Northern Europe. Australia was less arid than it is now. http://www.scotese.com/climate.htm Readings A. T. Wells, D. J. Forman, L. C. Ranford, and P. J. Cook, Geology of The Amadeus Basin, Central Australia. Bulletin 100, Department of National Development, Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics, Commonwealth of Australia, 1970 Petermann Ranges and Surrounds - Site of Conservation Significance Northern Territory Department Of Natural Resources, Environment, The Arts and Sport. http://www.Lrm.Nt.Gov.Au/__Data/Assets/Pdf_File/0003/13881/60_Petermann.Pdf John J.W. Rogers and M. Santosh, “Configuration of Columbia, a Mesoproterozoic Supercontinent” Gondwana Research, V. 5, No. I , pp. 5-22. 2002 International Association for Gondwana Research, Japan. N. Kositcin (Ed.) “Geodynamic Synthesis of the Gawler Craton and Curnamona Province” Geoscience Australia Record 2010/27Rec A. Davidson “A review of the Grenville orogen in its North American type area” AGSO Journal of Australian Geology & Geophysics, 16 (112), 3-24, 199527 J. F. Lindsay “Heavitree Quartzite, a Neoproterozoic (ca 800-760 Ma), high-energy, tidally influenced, ramp association, Amadeus Basin, central Australia” Australian Journal of Earth Sciences (1999) 46, 127-139. M. H. Monroe Australia: The Land Where Time Began: A biography of the Australian continent, 2015, http://www.austhrutime.com C. Wright, et al. “Seismic structure and continuity of the Redbank Thrust Zone, central Australia” BMR Journal of Australian Geology and Geophysics, 13, 359-368, 1993. Fred Beekman and Randell A. Stephenson “Mechanical Stability of the Redbank Thrust Zone, Central Australia: Dynamical and Rheological Implications” Australian Journal of Earth Sciences No. 44(2), 215-226, 1997