Journal
EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 421, Issue -, Pages 107-116Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2015.03.036
Keywords
subduction plate tectonic reconstruction; seismic tomography; dynamic topography; New Guinea; Australia
Categories
Funding
- Australian Research Council [FT110100560]
- Research Council of Norway through its Centres of Excellence funding scheme [223272]
- Australian Research Council [FT110100560] Funding Source: Australian Research Council
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Unravelling causes for absolute plate velocity change and continental dynamic topography change is challenging because of the interdependence of large-scale geodynamic driving processes. Here, we unravel a clear spatio-temporal relation between latest Cretaceous-Early Cenozoic subduction at the northern edge of the Australian plate, Early Cenozoic Australian plate motion changes and Cenozoic topography evolution of the Australian continent. We present evidence for a similar to 4000 km wide subduction zone, which culminated in ophiolite obduction and arc-continent collision in the New Guinea-Pocklington Trough region during subduction termination, coinciding with cessation of spreading in the Coral Sea, a similar to 5 cm/yr decrease in northward Australian plate velocity, and slab detachment. Renewed northward motion caused the Australian plate to override the sinking subduction remnant, which we detect with seismic tomography at 800-1200 km depth in the mantle under central-southeast Australia at a position predicted by our absolute plate reconstructions. With a numerical model of slab sinking and mantle flow we predict a long-wavelength subsidence (negative dynamic topography) migrating southward from similar to 50 Ma to present, explaining Eocene-Oligocene subsidence of-the Queensland Plateau, similar to 330 m of late Eocene-early Oligocene subsidence in the Gulf of Carpentaria, Oligocene-Miocene subsidence of the Marion Plateau, and providing a first-order fit to the present-day, similar to 200 m deep, topographic depression of the Lake Eyre Basin and Murray-Darling Basin. We propound that dynamic topography evolution provides an independent means to couple geological processes to a mantle reference frame. This is complementary to, and can be integrated with, other approaches such as hotspot and slab reference frathes. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
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