Geological Setting, Marine Geomorphology, Sediments and Oceanic Shoals Growth History of the Kimberley Region

The offshore sedimetary basins of the Kimberley region are becoming established as a major hydrocarbon province, but the region is also known for its marine wilderness values. Its position close to a plate boundary is reflected in significant rates of continental margin subsidence. In addition to th...

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Main Author: Collins, Lindsay
Format: Journal Article
Published: Royal Society of Western Australia 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/2816
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author Collins, Lindsay
author_facet Collins, Lindsay
author_sort Collins, Lindsay
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description The offshore sedimetary basins of the Kimberley region are becoming established as a major hydrocarbon province, but the region is also known for its marine wilderness values. Its position close to a plate boundary is reflected in significant rates of continental margin subsidence. In addition to the "normal" continental margin geomorphic units of shelf, slope and rise the offshore Kimberley region has well developed plateaux (e.g. Scott Plateau), terraces (e.g. Rowley Terrace), and banks (e.g. Sahul rise, Sahul bank) which interrupt the otherwise gentle sea slopes present, and provide foundations for the offshore reefs, including the Sahul shoals, Ashmore, Seringapatam, and Scott Reef and the Rowley Shoals. The continental shelf is a vast low gradient ramp with sandy bioclastic sediments reflecting both the modern biota and a history of past sea level and oceanographic changes, so that sediments are a mixture of modern bioclasts, particles stranded by sea level rise, and precipitated carbonate grains (ooids and peloids) which were dominant prior to Leeuwin Current onset some 12,000 years ago.Whilst little is known about the nearshore fringing reefs, in areas of macro-tides and significant sediment input, the morphology, internal architecture and growth history of reefs and shoals of the Oceanic Shoals Bioregion indicates that these are long-lived features which have survived despite relatively high rates of continental margin subsidence and oscillating sea levels of the Pleistocene glaciations. However, drowning by sea level rise was the fate of some of the reefs and shoals of the Sahul Shelf, situated at the leading edge of the downturning Australian plate, in contrast to continuing reef growth at Scott Reef and the Rowley Shoals to the south. In the morphological series provided by the three Rowley Shoals, differential subsidence is the primary control on rates of lagoon infill controlling platform morphology. This study demonstrates the resilience of reefs on the subsiding margin whilst linking reef morphology to the relative amount of pre-Holocene subsidence.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-28162017-03-08T13:18:42Z Geological Setting, Marine Geomorphology, Sediments and Oceanic Shoals Growth History of the Kimberley Region Collins, Lindsay growth history Kimberley sediments subsidence continental shelf geomorphology sea levels Oceanic Shoals Bioregion coral reefs The offshore sedimetary basins of the Kimberley region are becoming established as a major hydrocarbon province, but the region is also known for its marine wilderness values. Its position close to a plate boundary is reflected in significant rates of continental margin subsidence. In addition to the "normal" continental margin geomorphic units of shelf, slope and rise the offshore Kimberley region has well developed plateaux (e.g. Scott Plateau), terraces (e.g. Rowley Terrace), and banks (e.g. Sahul rise, Sahul bank) which interrupt the otherwise gentle sea slopes present, and provide foundations for the offshore reefs, including the Sahul shoals, Ashmore, Seringapatam, and Scott Reef and the Rowley Shoals. The continental shelf is a vast low gradient ramp with sandy bioclastic sediments reflecting both the modern biota and a history of past sea level and oceanographic changes, so that sediments are a mixture of modern bioclasts, particles stranded by sea level rise, and precipitated carbonate grains (ooids and peloids) which were dominant prior to Leeuwin Current onset some 12,000 years ago.Whilst little is known about the nearshore fringing reefs, in areas of macro-tides and significant sediment input, the morphology, internal architecture and growth history of reefs and shoals of the Oceanic Shoals Bioregion indicates that these are long-lived features which have survived despite relatively high rates of continental margin subsidence and oscillating sea levels of the Pleistocene glaciations. However, drowning by sea level rise was the fate of some of the reefs and shoals of the Sahul Shelf, situated at the leading edge of the downturning Australian plate, in contrast to continuing reef growth at Scott Reef and the Rowley Shoals to the south. In the morphological series provided by the three Rowley Shoals, differential subsidence is the primary control on rates of lagoon infill controlling platform morphology. This study demonstrates the resilience of reefs on the subsiding margin whilst linking reef morphology to the relative amount of pre-Holocene subsidence. 2011 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/2816 Royal Society of Western Australia restricted
spellingShingle growth history
Kimberley
sediments
subsidence
continental shelf
geomorphology
sea levels
Oceanic Shoals Bioregion
coral reefs
Collins, Lindsay
Geological Setting, Marine Geomorphology, Sediments and Oceanic Shoals Growth History of the Kimberley Region
title Geological Setting, Marine Geomorphology, Sediments and Oceanic Shoals Growth History of the Kimberley Region
title_full Geological Setting, Marine Geomorphology, Sediments and Oceanic Shoals Growth History of the Kimberley Region
title_fullStr Geological Setting, Marine Geomorphology, Sediments and Oceanic Shoals Growth History of the Kimberley Region
title_full_unstemmed Geological Setting, Marine Geomorphology, Sediments and Oceanic Shoals Growth History of the Kimberley Region
title_short Geological Setting, Marine Geomorphology, Sediments and Oceanic Shoals Growth History of the Kimberley Region
title_sort geological setting, marine geomorphology, sediments and oceanic shoals growth history of the kimberley region
topic growth history
Kimberley
sediments
subsidence
continental shelf
geomorphology
sea levels
Oceanic Shoals Bioregion
coral reefs
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/2816