Geophysical anomalies and quartz deformation of the Warburton West structure, central Australia
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Authors
Glikson, Andrew Y.
Meixner, A.J.
Radke, B.
Uysal, I.T.
Saygin, E.
Vickers, J.
Mernagh, T.P.
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Elsevier
Abstract
This paper reports geophysical anomalies and intra-crystalline quartz lamellae in drill cores from the Warburton
West Basin overlapping the border of South Australia and the Northern Territory. The pre-Upper Carboniferous
~450 × 300 km-large Warburton Basin, north-eastern South Australia, is marked by distinct eastern and western
magnetic, gravity and low-velocity seismic tomography anomalies. Quartz grains from arenite core samples
contain intra-crystalline lamellae in carbonate–quartz veins and in clastic grains, similar to those reported earlier
from arenites, volcanic rocks and granites from the Warburton East Basin. Universal Stage measurements of
quartz lamellae in both sub-basins define Miller–Bravais indices of {10–12} and {10–13}. In-situ quartz lamellae
occur only in pre-Late Carboniferous rocks whereas lamellae-bearing clastic quartz grains occur in both pre-Late
Carboniferous and post-Late Carboniferous rocks — the latter likely redeposited from the pre-Late Carboniferous
basement. Quartz lamellae in clastic quartz grains are mostly curved and bent either due to tectonic deformation
or to re-deformation of impact-generated planar features during crustal rebound or/and post-impact tectonic
deformation. Seismic tomography low-velocity anomalies in both Warburton West Basin and Warburton East
Basin suggest fracturing of the crust to depths of more than 20 km. Geophysical modelling of the Cooper Basin,
which overlies the eastern Warburton East Basin, suggests existence of a body of high-density (~2.9–3.0 gr/
cm3
) and high magnetic susceptibility (SI ~ 0.012–0.037) at a depth of ~6–10 km at the centre of the anomalies.
In the Warburton West Basin a large magnetic body of SI= 0.030 is modelled below ~10 km, with a large positive
gravity anomaly offset to the north of the magnetic anomaly. In both the Warburton East and Warburton West
the deep crustal fracturing suggested by the low velocity seismic tomography complicates interpretations of
the gravity data. Universal Stage measurements of quartz lamellae suggest presence of both planar deformation
features of shock metamorphic derivation and deformed planar lamella. The latter may be attributed either to redeformation
of impact-generated lamella, impact rebound deformation or/and post impact tectonic deformation.
The magnetic anomalies in the Warburton East and West sub-basins are interpreted in terms of (1) presence of
deep seated central mafic bodies; (2) deep crustal fracturing and (3) removal of Devonian and Carboniferous
strata associated with rebound of a central uplift consequent on large asteroid impact. Further tests of the
Warburton structures require deep crustal seismic transects.
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Tectonophysics