New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics abstracts
Pliocene-Pleistocene marine cyclothems, Wanganui Basin, New Zealand:
a lithostratigraphic framework
TIM NAISH
PETER J. J. KAMP
Department of Earth Sciences
The University of Waikato
Private Bag 3105
Hamilton, New Zealand
Abstract The Rangitikei River valley between Mangaweka and
Vinegar Hill and the surrounding Ohingaiti region in eastern Wanganui Basin
contains a late Pliocene to early Pleistocene (c. 2.6-1.7 Ma), c. 1100 m thick,
southward-dipping (4-9deg.), marine cyclothemic succession. Twenty sedimentary
cycles occur within the succession, each of which contains coarse-grained
(siliciclastic sandstone and coquina) and fine-grained (siliciclastic
siltstone) units. Nineteen of the cycles are assigned to the
Rangitikei
Group (new). Six new formations are defined within the Rangitikei Group,
and their distribution in the Ohingaiti region is represented in a new geologic
map. The new formations are named:
Mangarere,
Tikapu,
Makohine,
Orangipongo,
Mangaonoho, and
Vinegar
Hill. Each formation comprises one or more cyclothems and includes a
previously described and named distinctive basal horizon. Discrete sandstones,
siltstones, and coquinas within formations are assigned member status and
correspond to systems tracts in sequence stratigraphic nomenclature. The
members provide the link between the new formational lithostratigraphy and the
sequence stratigraphy of the Rangitikei Group. Base of cycle coquina members
accumulated during episodes of sediment starvation associated with
stratigraphic condensation on an open marine shelf during sea-level
transgressions. Siltstone members accumulated in mid-shelf environments (50-100
m water depth) during sea-level highstands, whereas the overlying sandstone
members are ascribed to inner shelf and shoreface environments (0-50 m water
depth) and accumulated during falling eustatic sea-level conditions. Repetitive
changes in water depth of 50-100 m magnitude are consistent with a
glacio-eustatic origin for the cyclothems, which correspond to an interval of
Earth history when successive glaciations in the Northern Hemisphere are known
to have occurred. Moreover, the chronology of the Rangitikei River section
indicates that Rangitikei Group cyclothems accumulated during short duration,
41 ka cycles in continental ice volume attributed to the dominance of the
Milankovitch obliquity orbital parameter.
The Ohingaiti region has simple postdepositional structure. The late Pliocene
formations dip generally to the SSW between 4deg. and 9deg.. Discernible
discordances of c. 1deg. between successively younger formations are attributed
to synsedimentary tilting of the shelf concomitant with migration of the
tectonic hingeline southward into the basin. The outcrop distribution of the
Rangitikei Group is strongly influenced by this regional tilt and also by three
major northeast-southwest oriented, high-angle reverse faults (Rauoterangi,
Pakihikura, and Rangitikei Faults).
Keywords late Pliocene; Nukumaruan Stage; cyclothems;
Wanganui Basin; glacio-eustacy; sea-level change; new stratigraphic names;
Mangarere Formation; Tikapu Formation; Makohine Formation; Orangipongo
Formation; Mangaonoho Formation; Vinegar Hill Formation; Rangitikei Group
New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 1995, Vol. 38: 223-243
0028-8306/95/3802-0223 $2.50/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand
1995
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (2964K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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