New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics abstracts
Revision of the Piripauan and Haumurian local stages and correlation of the
Santonian-Maastrichtian (Late Cretaceous) in New Zealand
JAMES CRAMPTON1
TERRY MUMME2
IAN RAINE1
LUCIA RONCAGLIA3
POUL SCHIøLER4
PERCY STRONG1
GILLIAN TURNER5
GRAEME WILSON1
1Institute of Geological & Nuclear Sciences
P.O. Box 30 368
Lower Hutt, New Zealand
email: j.crampton@gns.cri.nz; i.raine@gns.cri.nz; p.strong@gns.cri.nz;
g.wilson@gns.cri.nz
247 Parkvale Road
Karori
Wellington, New Zealand
3Università degli Studi di Modena
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra
Via Università 4
41100 Modena, Italy*
*Present address: Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, Thoravej 8,
DK-2400 Copenhagen NV, Denmark. email: lr@geus.dk
4Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland
Thoravej 8
DK-2400 Copenhagen NV, Denmark
email: pos@geus.dk
5Institute of Geophysics
Victoria University of Wellington
P.O. Box 600
Wellington, New Zealand
email: gillian.turner@vuw.ac.nz
Abstract The uppermost Cretaceous in New Zealand is
represented by the local Mata Series, composed of the Piripauan and overlying
Haumurian Stages. The existing definitions and subdivision of these stages, and
the type section at Haumuri Bluff, southeastern Marlborough, are wholly
inadequate. To address these problems, three key sections in southeastern
Marlborough have been studied in detail: a tributary of Ben More Stream, the
headwaters of Kekerengu River, and a railway cutting at the mouth of Conway
River. All three sections have yielded rich palynomorph assemblages and the
first two contain inoceramid bivalves and foraminiferal faunas. In addition,
magnetostratigraphic data have been obtained from the Ben More Stream
section.
We propose to revise the Piripauan and Haumurian Stages from new boundary
stratotypes in the Ben More Stream section. The Piripauan is defined at the
lowest occurrence of the inoceramid I. pacificus. The base of the
Haumurian Stage is defined at the lowest occurrence of the dinoflagellate
Nelsoniella aceras. In addition, we propose to subdivide the
Haumurian into formal Lower and Upper substages; the base of the Upper
Haumurian is defined at the lowest occurrence of the dinoflagellate
Isabelidinium pellucidum in a boundary stratotype in the Conway River
railway cutting. These boundary criteria can be correlated widely within New
Zealand across a broad range of marine facies. The Piripauan contains two
inoceramid and three dinoflagellate zones. The Haumurian contains six
dinoflagellate zones and five subzones. Based on biostratigraphic and
magnetostratigraphic data, the Piripauan/Haumurian boundary is correlated with
the C34-C33 magnetochron boundary and with the middle-upper Santonian boundary.
The Piripauan and Haumurian Stages thus have durations of c. 1.7 and
19.5 m.y., respectively.
In terms of content, these revisions largely preserve the stages as used
previously in New Zealand and require no significant changes to existing
geological maps.
Keywords biostratigraphy; Campanian; dinoflagellates;
chronostratigraphy; Haumurian Stage; inoceramid bivalves; Late Cretaceous;
Maastrichtian; magnetostratigraphy; Marlborough; Mata Series; Piripauan Stage;
Santonian; time-scale
New Zealand Journal of Geology & Geophysics, 2000, Vol. 43:
309-333
0028-8306/00/4303-0309 $7.00/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand
2000
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (3630K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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