177
Tecronoph_vsics. 87 ( 1982) I77- 183 Elsevier Scientific
abashing
Company,
PLATE TECTONIC MIOCENE
Amsterdam-Printed
SIGNIFICANCE
in The Netherlands
OF LATE OLIGOCENE/EARLY
DEEP SEA SEDIMENTATION
AT MAEWO, VANUATU
(NEW HEBRIDES)
G. NEEF Uni~~sit~~ Coliege,
W.S. & L.B. Robinson (Final
version received
Broken
Hill, N.S. U’. ~~u.stru~~a~
25, 198 1)
February
ABSTRACT
Neef, G., 1982. Plate tectonic Maewo,
Vanuatu
Tectonophysics,
Plate Boundaries. Eight lithofacies mechanisms,
representing
are recognised
Oligocene/Early
Miocene
floor on which which indicate
significance
(New Hebrides).
of Late Oligocene/Early
In: G.H. 87:
age, on Maewo
trending,
sections
beyond
deep sea sedimentation
The Evolution
deep sea fan, dominantly
in the lower part
Island,
the deep sea fan prograded deposition
Miocene
(Editor).
at
of the India-Pacific
177- 183.
a westward
in geologic
Packham
Vanuatu,
New Hebrides.
are non-calcareous,
the cafcareous
depth,
from mass flow
Formation,
Also present
red siltstone
compensation
deposited
of the Sarava
and minor
i.e. a depth greater
of Late
representing
the
green siltstone than 4.25 km,
and rare thin airfall ash. Previous Miocene. suggests
proposed the great
that rifting occurred
Pentecost 35-28
workers
However,
Ma (Oligocene).
Miocene
occurred
at which
The ophiolite
reconstruction
day Mariana
Rifting
has a dismembered
suite may have formed
of the Oligocene
Arc System.
the subduction
in the area now occupied
the Late Oligocene/Early
prior to the Late Oligocene.
Island, which lies south of Maewo,
The writer’s present
that rifting depth
Interarc
arc system
by Maewo
Miocene
may have occurred ophiolite
in an interarc
the Mid
were deposited
even earlier because
environment.
of the New Hebrides
westwards
during
suite which ranges in age from
rifting ceased by the Early Miocene
of zone may have migrated
strata
to lie along
is an analogue
and during
of the
the Mid-Late
the Maewo-Pentecost
axis.
INTRODUCTION
Maewo lies in northeastern Vanuatu (Fig. 1). The central part of the archipelago is composed of an eastern belt composed of Early Miocene to Early Pliocene basaltic lavas and volcaniclastic sediment capped by elevated Late Pliocene to Mid Pleistocene limestone. Westwards lies the central chain of active volcanoes, which formed during the Late Pliocene. In the western belt, on the island of Malekula, are thick volcaniclastics of Early Miocene to Late Miocene age, which are overlain by Pliocene sediment and Quaternary raised reefs (Mitchell, 1971). Current plate tectonic models of the New Hebrides have subduction westwards beneath the New Hebrides during the period 23-c. 10 Ma (Carney and Macfarlane, 1978, fig.4). During the Early Miocene a frontal arc and rear arc were extant 0040- 195 1/82,‘0000-0000,‘$02.75
0 1982 Elsevier Scientific
Publishing
Company
MIOCENE
EARLY
/
168.E
Fig. 1. Map of the New Hebrides shows the location of Maewo. Fig. 2. Late Oligocene-Miocene
strata developed
on Maewo island, New Hebrides (after Carney, 1982).
(Carney and Macfarlane, 1978). The North Fiji Basin formed by anti-clockwise rotation of the New Hebrides archipelago relative to Fiji during the last 6 Ma (Falvey, 1978). Subduction of Australian-Indian Plate eastwards beneath the New Hebrides commenced at 5 Ma (Carney and Macfarlane, 1978) (or c. 8 Ma-Carney and Macfarlane, this volume). The geology of Maewo, comprising strata of Late Oligocene, Miocene, Pliocene and Quaternary age, has been mapped by Obelliane (1958), Liggett (1967) and Camey (1982). Stratigraphic nomenclature is by Carney (1982) (Fig. 2). The Sighotara Group, which is at least 6QOm thick west of Sarava Point (Carney, 1982), contains the Sarava- and Wustoro@ra- Formations (Fig. 2). During the writer’s visit to Maewo only the lower part of the Late Oligocene/Early Miocene Sarava Formation
Fig. 3. a. New Hebrides Arc System during the Oligocene symbols
are: 54~ =Maewo;
P = Pentecost;
.S =Espiritu
(after Carney and Macfarlane, Santo; Ma = Malekula;
1978). Island
Vr ==Viti Levu; Vf.. =
Vanua Levu. during the Oligocene-Mid
b. Section of the New
Hebrides
arc system
x =Ohgocene
sequence
on Pentecost
ophiolite
and probably
Miocene deep sea fan (lower part of the Sarava Formation) volcanism mudstone
on Malekula; in northwest
H. D. =Hornblende
diorite
Miocene.
on Maewo;
Symbols
used are:
S= Late Oligocene-Early
on Maewo; C = Eariy Miocene talc alkaline
(18 Ma) on Malekula,
R.M. =?
Oligocene
red
Malekula.
c. Section of the New Hebrides arc system during the Mid-Late Miocene. Symbol used is: T = Gfobigerina ooze (T~~tmuto
Formation).
179
25 -14 Ma (Late Mid
OligoceneMiocene)
a I
35-14
Ma
Oligocene-Mid
Miocene
b (InactIve)
A
western
Belt (Inactive)
I /
=I-----
L(?
-
I I
/
13-9 Ma (Mid-Late Miocene)
probable westword subduction zone
migration
of the
was
studied.
exposed, upwards Sarava
About
58Om
uninhabited (Carney, Formation age (San
and nannofossils
Jorge
Fauna)
is probably
by diastrophism present
The aim of this paper very deep water-below
Formation
AND ENVIRONMENT
fines
planktic
of thin calcarenite, is not ,known
(Carney
that the Sarava
certain inferences from this new data. the lower part of the Sarava Formation
the well
which
Unfortunately
except for a uniform
the calcareous
along
formation,
The age of the basal part of the
1969).
not far subsurface
is to report
examined
which give a Late Oligocene/Early
in the samples
and the age of the Sarava
strata are little affected
STRATIGRAPHY
inland.
(Coleman,
are lacking
were
of Maewo--the
is from Large Foraminifera
Miocene
Ophiolite
sections
cqast
1982), is not well exposed
aminifera
by the writer,
of geologic
northeastern
compensation
for-
collected
precisely.
The
ca. 30” tilt to the west.
and Macfarlane, Formation depth
1976).
was deposited
(CCD)
and
in
to draw
Full documentation of the sedimentology of is to be made elsewhere (Neef et al, in prep.).
OF DEPOSITION
OF THE SARAVA
FORMATION
The strata comprising the formation contain rudite beds usually ca. 1 m thick (maximum thickness 13.4 m) and graded rudite-arenite/graded arenite beds which range in thickness from 1-15 m. These beds contain clasts of spilite, which have been considered to be of Wainamala type-Eocene 1978), dacite, and Late Eocene and Early Miocene Geochemical
evidence
east from the Vitiaz farlane,
1978)-as
limestone
is strong Arc where
similar
was previously
clasts (Coleman,
calcarenite
that many
of the spilite clasts are derived
rock types are present
proposed
1969). Also present
beds largely composed
in age (Carney and Macfarlane, limestone clasts (Coleman, 1969).
for the origin
(Carney
of the Late
are thin (maximum
of large foraminifera,
from the and MacEocene
thickness
rare Bouma
72 cm)
sequence
beds,
penecontemporaneous breccia beds, and thin air fall ash which is rarely thicker than ca. l-2 cm. Intercalated with these beds are non-calcareous red siltstone-which is thicker,
generally,
in the southern
part of the outcrop
area-and
minor
beds of non
calcareous green siltstone. The red and green siltstone were deposited C.C.D. which was at a depth of 4.25 km during the Late Oligocene/Early (Van
Andel,
1975). Deposition
was probably
significantly
deeper
than
below the Miocene 4.25 km
because red siltstone clasts derived upslope, presumably eroded from the walls of the canyon, are present in the rudite and graded rudite-arenite beds. Other data suggesting deposition in deep water is from trace fossils such as Scoliciu sp., present at the base of a calarenite, which is also known in deep water deposits of Cenozoic age of Spain (Crimes, 1977) and New Zealand (Gregory, 1969). The facies types present in the lower part of the Sarava Formation are consistent with deposition in a deep sea fan environment such as those described by Nelson and Nilsen (1974). The deep sea fan extended eastwards to the surf zone of a Late Oligocene/Early Miocene Vitiaz Arc. Agreement then is with the palaeogeographic reconstruction of Carney and Macfarlane (1978, fig. 4a) (Fig. 3); however, deposi-
tion was in significantly After
deeper water than they proposed.
the deposition
because
of the Sarava
the Late Miocene
1982) contains
benthic
range of 2-3
foraminifera
km (Paltech
Dr. I. Deighton,
Formation
Tafwutmuto
1979/17
shallowed
somewhat
a fossil Globigerina ooze (Carney.
which indicate
report
pers. commun.
the ocean
Formation,
that deposition
to the New Hebrides
was in a depth
Geological
Survey,
1980).
DISCUSSION
Carney and MacFarlane (1978, fig. 4d) proposed that in the latitude of Maewo the sea floor deepened and rifting occurred during the period 13-7 Ma. As evidence for initiation of rifting they show that there are (Mitchell, 1970) and Maewo at this time indicating
unconformities on Malekula a change in tectonic regime.
However, deposited
the great depth at which the lower part of the Sarava Formation was suggests that rifting occurred earlier than Carney and Macfarlane (1978)
thought. Present
day intra-arc
km (Dubois
of the lower part Trough,
troughs
of the New Hebrides
have a maximum
et al., 1978); they are not as deep as the suggested of the Sarava
are 4 km deep (Karig
depth
of deposition
genetic
difference
Formation.
Interarc
1971, fig. 6)-a
depth
of the lower part of the Sarava between
interarc
and intraarc
basins,
of deposition
such as the Mariana
approaching Formation.
basins
depth of 3.3
depth
that of assumed There may be little
because
Carney
and
Mac-
farlane (this volume) show that the New Hebrides “intraarc” basins. such as the Coriolis Trough, are floored by recent lava extrusions suggesting that they are sites of early
interarc
Oligocene ophiolite
extension.
It is likely
(or the Late Eocene), sequence
on Pentecost
that
rifting
occurred
during
the
Early
i.e. before 35 Ma, (the age of the oldest part of the Island,
Mallick
and Neef.
1974). Differences
be-
tween crust formed at mid ocean ridges, and interarc basins are slight (Karig and Moore, 1975). Such a mode of origin, if proved, solves the difficult problem of the kind of plate tectonic environment in which the ophiolite sequence of Pentecost formed
(Carney
formed
in interarc
and Macfarlane, basins
1976; Ravenne
et al., 1976, p. 69). Also, ophiolite
is likely to be considerably
deformed
during
subsequent
periods of diastrophism (Hawkins, 1974). Such deformed ophiolite is found on Pentecost (Mallick and Neef, 1974; Carney and Macfarlane, this volume). The lower part of the Sarava Formation was probably deposited in an extinct interarc environment because the porphyritic hornblende diorite intrusives of Malekula, dated c. 18 Ma (Early Miocene; Gorton, 1974, p. 232) and line volcaniclastics (the Matanui Group; Mitchell, 1970) suggest that a arc (like that of the present day volcanic chain; Mitchell, 1970) was That is igneous rocks should not be formed in a remnant (third) arc Also, proposed
basin
subsidence
elsewhere,
to below
the CCD
interval
following
e.g. the Parece Vela Basin (Karig and Moore,
the calcalkanormal island then present. environment.
rifting
has been
1975). Most of the
182
A
YiTlAL RED B
s
MUDSTONE (MALEWA)
g -
4 2 w
z
i$
;
ARC z 0 ;; 23
1:: z*. -
$zJ
;z
!?a
Fig. 4. A. Bathymetric Oligocene
profile across the Mariana Arc system after Karig (1971). B. Elements
of the
arc system which strongly resembles the Mariana Arc System.
sediment was probably derived from the Vitiaz Arc; Karig and Moore (1975) consider that little sediment is derived from third arc, i.e., sedimentation was asymmetric. Red Mudstone of unknown age is present along the northwest coast of Malekula (Mitchell, 1970). If the red mudstone is pre-Miocene (Mitchell, 1970, p. 205) then Oligocene palaeogeography strongly resembles the present day Mariana Arc System (Fig. 4). The Red Mudstone of Malekula being an analogue of the Parece Vela Basin of the Mariana Arc System. Perhaps the most definitive account of interarc deposits in an oceanic environment is by Karig and Moore (1975). They found that like the deposits of the lower part of the Sarava Formation most of the sedimentation in oceanic interarc basins is from mass flows. The shallowing represented by the Tafwutmuto Formation is probably due to the westward migration of the frontal arc to lie in the longitude of Maewo and Pentecost Islands as submarine tholeiitic volcanism is known at c. 7 Ma on Maewo (Carney, in press) (Fig. 3~). ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The New Hebridean Geological Survey is thanked for logistic support, allowing the writer to refer to Dr. Ian Deighton’s report.
and
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