Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Sedimentary history of the Tethyan margins of eastern Gondwana during the Mesozoic

January 1, 1992

A composite Mesozoic geological history for the Gondwana margins to the Eastern Tethys Ocean can be assembled from stratigraphic successions on the Australian and Himalayan margins and from drill sites of Ocean Drilling Program Legs 122 and 123. During the Triassic, this region drifted northwards, entering tropical paleolatitudes during the Late Triassic-Early Jurassic, then returned to mid-latitudes for the Middle Jurassic through Early Cretaceous. Shallow-water carbonates are restricted to the tropical-latitude interval; at other times, the margins are dominated by clastic deposition. Episodes of deltaic sandstone progradation over the shelves are caused by eustatic sealevel fluctuations, by wet climatic conditions within the source regions and by local tectonic activity. A major hiatus between Callovian shallow-water shelf deposits and Oxfordian deep-water sediments is an ubiquitous feature, which may be related to a widespread plate tectonic reorganization and the cascading effects of associated sealevel rise and elevated carbon dioxide levels. Off Northwest Australia, this Callovian/Oxfordian event also coincides with an episode of block faulting. Marginal sediments deposited during the Late Jurassic are mainly marine claystone containing abundant terrigenous organic matter. Shallow depths of carbonate compensation (CCD) during the Late Jurassic through Early Cretaceous prevented the preservation of carbonate over most of the Argo basin off Northwest Australia, and these deep-sea sediments consist mainly of condensed, oxygenated radiolarian-rich claystone. During the late Kimmeridgian-early Tithonian, a downward excursion in the CCD enabled limited preservation of some larger nannofossils and mollusc fragments within the pelagic deposits, a feature also recorded in coeval deposits in the Atlantic. Explosive volcanism accompanied the final stages of rifting between India and Australia during the late Berriasian and Valanginian, producing volcaniclastic debris washing into the deltas and widespread ash deposits. The late Barremian and Aptian sediments indicate a rise in the CCD, accompanied by warming of the region and an increased delivery of organic-rich claystone into the basins.

Publication Year 1992
Title Sedimentary history of the Tethyan margins of eastern Gondwana during the Mesozoic
DOI 10.1029/GM070p0203
Authors James G. Ogg, Felix Gradstein, Julie A. Dumoulin, Massimo Sarti, Paul Brown
Publication Type Book Chapter
Publication Subtype Book Chapter
Index ID 70182605
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Alaska Science Center