Rifting and subduction in the Papuan peninsula. Papua New Guinea: the significance of the Trobriand tough, the Nubara strike-slip fault, and the Woodlark Rift to the present configuration of Papua New Guinea

Show simple item record

dc.contributor Robinson, D. M.
dc.contributor Stowell, Harold Hilton
dc.contributor Kopaska-Merkel, David C.
dc.contributor Cemen, Ibrahim
dc.contributor.advisor Goodliffe, Andrew M.
dc.contributor.author Cameron, Milo Louis
dc.contributor.other University of Alabama Tuscaloosa
dc.date.accessioned 2017-03-01T16:59:04Z
dc.date.available 2017-03-01T16:59:04Z
dc.date.issued 2014
dc.identifier.other u0015_0000001_0001515
dc.identifier.other Cameron_alatus_0004D_11825
dc.identifier.uri https://ir.ua.edu/handle/123456789/1974
dc.description Electronic Thesis or Dissertation en_US
dc.description.abstract The calculated extension (~111 km) across the Woodlark rift is incompatible with the > 130 km needed to exhume the Metamorphic Core Complexes on shallow angle faults (< 30°) using N-S extension in the Woodlark Basin. High resolution bathymetry, seismicity, and seismic reflection data indicate that the Nubara Fault continues west of the Trobriand Trough, intersects the Woodlark spreading center, and forms the northern boundary of the Woodlark plate and the southern boundary of the Trobriand plate. The newly defined Trobriand plate, to the north of this boundary, has moved SW-NE along the right lateral Nubara Fault, creating SW-NE extension in the region bounded by the MCC's of the D'Entrecasteaux Islands and Moresby Seamount. Gravity and bathymetry data extracted along four transect lines were used to model the gravity and flexure across the Nubara Fault boundary. Differences exist in the elastic thickness between the northern and southern parts of the lines at the Metamorphic Core Complexes of Goodenough Island (Te_south = 5.7 x 103 m; Te_north = 6.1 x 103 m) and Fergusson Island (Te_south = 1.2 x 103 m; Te_north = 5.5 x 103 m). Differences in the elastic strength of the lithosphere also exist at Moresby Seamount (Te_south = 4.2 x 103 m; Te_north = 4.7 x 103 m) and Egum Atoll (Te_south =7.5 x 103 m; Te_north = 1.3 x 104 m). The differences between the northern and southern parts of each transect line imply an east-west boundary that is interpreted to be the Nubara Fault. The opening of the Woodlark Basin resulted in the rotation of the Papuan Peninsula and the Woodlark Rise, strike slip motion between the Solomon Sea and the Woodlark Basin at the Nubara Fault, and the formation of the PAC-SOL-WLK; SOL-WLK-TRB triple junctions. The intersection of the Woodlark Spreading Center with the Nubara Fault added the AUS-WLK-TRB triple junction and established the Nubara Fault as the northern boundary of the Woodlark plate en_US
dc.format.extent 230 p.
dc.format.medium electronic
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.language English
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.publisher University of Alabama Libraries
dc.relation.ispartof The University of Alabama Electronic Theses and Dissertations
dc.relation.ispartof The University of Alabama Libraries Digital Collections
dc.relation.hasversion born digital
dc.rights All rights reserved by the author unless otherwise indicated. en_US
dc.subject Geology
dc.subject Geophysics
dc.subject Plate tectonics
dc.title Rifting and subduction in the Papuan peninsula. Papua New Guinea: the significance of the Trobriand tough, the Nubara strike-slip fault, and the Woodlark Rift to the present configuration of Papua New Guinea en_US
dc.type thesis
dc.type text
etdms.degree.department University of Alabama. Department of Geological Sciences
etdms.degree.discipline Geology
etdms.degree.grantor The University of Alabama
etdms.degree.level doctoral
etdms.degree.name Ph.D.


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search DSpace


Browse

My Account