Tectonic history of northern New Caledonian Basin from deep offshore seismic reflection: Relation to late Eocene obduction in New Caledonian, southwest Pacific

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Abstract

New, high-quality multichannel seismic reflection data from the western New Caledonia offshore domain allow for the first time the direct, continuous connection of seismic reflectors between the Deep Sea Drilling Project 208 drill hole on the Lord Howe Rise and the New Caledonia Basin. A novel seismic interpretation is hence proposed for the northern New Caledonia Basin stratigraphy, which places the Eocene/ Oligocene unconformity deeper than previously thought and revisits the actual thickness of the pre-Oligocene sequences. A causal link is proposed between the obduction of the South Loyalty Basin over New Caledonia (NC) and the tectonic history of the northern New Caledonia Basin. Here it is suggested that as the South Loyalty Basin was being obducted during early Oligocene times, the NC Basin subsided under the effect of the overloading and underthrusted to accommodate the compressional deformation, which resulted in (1) the uplift of the northern Fairway Ridge and (2) the sinking of the western flank of New Caledonia. This event also had repercussions farther west with the incipient subsidence of the Lord Howe Rise. Copyright 2008 by the American Geophysical Union.

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Collot, J., Geli, L., Lafoy, Y., Vially, R., Cluzel, D., Klingelhoefer, F., & Nouzé, H. (2008). Tectonic history of northern New Caledonian Basin from deep offshore seismic reflection: Relation to late Eocene obduction in New Caledonian, southwest Pacific. Tectonics, 27(6). https://doi.org/10.1029/2008TC002263

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