Journal article
The Miocene Nullarbor Limestone, southern Australia; deposition on a vast subtropical epeiric platform
Sedimentary geology, Vol.253-254, pp.1-16
05-01-2012
The early to middle Miocene Nullarbor Limestone forms the vast, karsted Nullarbor Plain in southern Australia, and may be the most extensive Miocene carbonate deposit described to date. These carbonates were deposited at southern paleolatitudes of nearly equal 40 degrees S and are interpreted to be subtropical to warm-temperate in character because of the presence of certain genera of tropical coralline algae (rhodoliths and articulated types), large benthic foraminifera, tropical molluscs, zooxanthellate corals, and micrite envelopes. Facies are dominated by skeletal grainstones and floatstones that accumulated in three interpreted paleoenvironments: (1) seagrass banks (upper photic zone), (2) rhodolith pavements (lower photic zone), and (3) open seafloors (lower photic to subphotic zone). A decrease of tropical components from west to east across the platform implies that warm oceanic currents (possibly related to a proto-Leeuwin Current), as well as a period of warm climate (Miocene Climatic Optimum), resulted in subtropical deposition at southern latitudes. The Southern Ocean extended inboard nearly equal 450 km from the shelf edge during Nullarbor Limestone deposition, but interpreted paleodepths did not extend much below the base of the photic zone. A small slope angle ( nearly equal 0.02 degrees ) over a wide shelf ( nearly equal 300,000 km (super 2) ) implies deposition on an epeiric platform or epeiric ramp. A Miocene barrier reef was likely coeval with Nullarbor Limestone deposition. Therefore, the inboard portion of the Nullarbor Limestone can be considered part of an extensive back-reef lagoon system on a rimmed epeiric platform, perhaps attaining a size similar to the modern Great Barrier Reef system. Abstract Copyright (2012) Elsevier, B.V.
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- Title
- The Miocene Nullarbor Limestone, southern Australia; deposition on a vast subtropical epeiric platform
- Creators
- Noel P. James - Queen's UniversityLaura G O'Connell - Florida Gulf Coast University, Department of Marine & Earth SciencesYvonne Bone - The University of Adelaide
- Publication Details
- Sedimentary geology, Vol.253-254, pp.1-16
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Number of pages
- 16
- Grant note
- Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of CanadaQueen's University
This study was funded by a Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada discovery grant (NPJ) and Queen's University Graduate Awards and International Tuition Awards (LGO). The Geological Survey of Western Australia (GSWA) provided logistical support, transportation, and gear, without which this study would not have been possible. We would especially like to thank R. Hocking and A. Mory of GSWA for their guidance and support. C. Miller assisted in data collection and helped make fieldwork enjoyable and successful. We would also like to thank B. Rosen (The Natural History Museum, London) for his time and expertise identifying corals and P. Hallock (University of South Florida) for help confirming foraminiferal classifications.
- Identifiers
- 99383985842306570
- Academic Unit
- Department of Marine & Earth Sciences
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article