Pleistocene glaciomarine sediments of the kisbee formation, wilson river, southwest Fiordland, and some tectonic and paleoclimatic implications

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Abstract

Fossiliferous sediments of Kisbee Formation (new name) preserved in the Wilson River east of Puysegur Point, southwest Fiordland, are interpreted as filling a submarine canyon that was incised 160 m into Ordovician metasedi-ments. The formation reflects deposition in quiet, deep cold water beneath floating ice, transitional into shallower water adjacent to an ice-marginal environment. The macrofauna and nannoflora indicate deposition within Castlecliffian time, somewhere between 0.5 and 1.2 Ma, at depths estimated to range between 50–150 and >200 m. A sequence of marine terraces adjacent to the Wilson River is correlated to global sea-level records, constraining the local uplift rate to 0.57 ± 0.04 mm/yr and the minimum age for Kisbee Formation to 0.69 Ma. If, as seems likely, the Matuyama-Brunhes paleo-magnetic transition lies within the mapped section, Kisbee Formation is older than 0.78 Ma at the the base, and Limopsis lived in >200 m of water. © 2007 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Turnbull, I., Sutherland, R., Beu, A., & Edwards, A. R. (2007). Pleistocene glaciomarine sediments of the kisbee formation, wilson river, southwest Fiordland, and some tectonic and paleoclimatic implications. New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 50(3), 193–204. https://doi.org/10.1080/00288300709509831

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