TY - JOUR
T1 - A drastic lower Miocene regolith evolution triggered by post obduction slab break-off and uplift in New Caledonia
AU - Sevin, Brice
AU - Cluzel, Dominique
AU - Maurizot, Pierre
AU - Ricordel-Prognon, Caroline
AU - Chaproniere, George
AU - Folcher, Nicolas
AU - Quesnel, Florence
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2014. American Geophysical Union.
PY - 2014/9/1
Y1 - 2014/9/1
N2 - A lower Miocene coarse conglomerate that crops out in the Népoui Peninsula does not represent the base of the marine transgression that followed obduction in New Caledonia. Instead, the conglomeratic alluvial fan that contains peridotite cobbles and reworked weathering products records a short-lived episode of terrestrial erosion intercalated between two intervals of subsidence marked by marine carbonate deposition. Considering the Miocene sea level evolution reported in the literature, it is concluded that neither lower Miocene transgression nor erosion were driven by sea level variation. In contrast, a southeastward propagating slab tear that initiated at the latitude of the high pressure/low temperature metamorphic complex of northern New Caledonia likely generated east to west tilting of New Caledonia, subsidence along the West Coast and hence fringing reef development together with moderate erosion of older regolith. Coincidence between conglomerate deposition and hence prominent erosion that closely followed emplacement of postobduction granitoids influenced by a slab window suggests a genetic link. Therefore, it is concluded that short-lived lower Miocene erosion was due to slab breakoff and subsequent uplift that occurred at ∼ 22 Ma. Lower Miocene erosion profoundly dissected the Peridotite Nappe and in the northern half of New Caledonia only left isolated klippes along the West Coast.
AB - A lower Miocene coarse conglomerate that crops out in the Népoui Peninsula does not represent the base of the marine transgression that followed obduction in New Caledonia. Instead, the conglomeratic alluvial fan that contains peridotite cobbles and reworked weathering products records a short-lived episode of terrestrial erosion intercalated between two intervals of subsidence marked by marine carbonate deposition. Considering the Miocene sea level evolution reported in the literature, it is concluded that neither lower Miocene transgression nor erosion were driven by sea level variation. In contrast, a southeastward propagating slab tear that initiated at the latitude of the high pressure/low temperature metamorphic complex of northern New Caledonia likely generated east to west tilting of New Caledonia, subsidence along the West Coast and hence fringing reef development together with moderate erosion of older regolith. Coincidence between conglomerate deposition and hence prominent erosion that closely followed emplacement of postobduction granitoids influenced by a slab window suggests a genetic link. Therefore, it is concluded that short-lived lower Miocene erosion was due to slab breakoff and subsequent uplift that occurred at ∼ 22 Ma. Lower Miocene erosion profoundly dissected the Peridotite Nappe and in the northern half of New Caledonia only left isolated klippes along the West Coast.
KW - The Lower Miocene erosion was due to uplift subsequent to slab break-off
KW - The Népoui conglomerate is interpreted differently from previous authors
KW - The erosion of regolith and the Népoui conglomerate are influenced by uplift
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84915768093&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/2014TC003588
DO - 10.1002/2014TC003588
M3 - Article
SN - 0278-7407
VL - 33
SP - 1787
EP - 1801
JO - Tectonics
JF - Tectonics
IS - 9
ER -