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Age constraints on surface deformation recorded by fossil shorelines at Cape Range, Western Australia

Authors :
Kathleen M. Wooton
Michael R. Sandstrom
E. Troy Rasbury
Milo Barham
Michael O'Leary
Yue Cai
Maureen E. Raymo
Source :
GSA Bulletin. 133:923-938
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Geological Society of America, 2020.

Abstract

Laterally continuous terraces along the western flank of Cape Range, Western Australia, record both past sea-level highstands and postdepositional vertical displacement. Four distinct fossil coral reef terraces extend nearly the entire length of the slowly uplifting anticlinal structure (∼100 km), enabling documentation of the timing and degree of deformation-induced elevation contamination of past sea-level estimates from fossil shorelines. Here, we present detailed elevations of the four terraces using differential global positioning system (DGPS) and airborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR) data sets, along with new ages for the three upper terraces. Geochemical dating using strontium isotope stratigraphy techniques revealed, from highest to lowest elevation: a late Miocene reef terrace, a late Pliocene shoreline, and a prominent mid-Pleistocene reef terrace (probably associated with the marine oxygen isotope stage 33–31 interglacial), along with a broad last interglacial (Eemian) reef terrace and lagoon, which terminate at the modern shoreline. Laterally variable elevation data integrated with newly defined ages for the terraces demonstrate a gradual and continuous relative deformation in the region that spans at least the last 6.5 m.y. and constrains the emergence of the Cape Range to sometime prior to the late Miocene. This data set also shows that the most recent interglacial shoreline has undergone

Details

ISSN :
19432674 and 00167606
Volume :
133
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
GSA Bulletin
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cee86a13f6385263abc2f58620075b1b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1130/b35564.1