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Crustal architecture of central Victoria: results from the 2006 deep crustal reflection seismic survey
Authors:R A Cayley  R J Korsch  D H Moore  R D Costelloe  A Nakamura  C E Willman
Institution:1. GeoScience Victoria, Department of Primary Industries , GPO Box 4440, Melbourne , VIC , 3001 , Australia ross.cayley@dpi.vic.gov.au;3. Predictive Mineral Discovery Cooperative Research Centre (pmd*CRC) , Geoscience Australia , GPO Box 378, Canberra , ACT , 2601 , Australia;4. GeoScience Victoria, Department of Primary Industries , GPO Box 4440, Melbourne , VIC , 3001 , Australia
Abstract:A ~400 km long deep crustal reflection seismic survey was acquired in central Victoria, Australia, in 2006. It has provided information on crustal architecture across the western Lachlan Orogen and has greatly added to the understanding of the tectonic evolution. The east-dipping Moyston Fault is confirmed as the suture between the Delamerian and western Lachlan Orogens, and is shown to extend down to the Moho. The Avoca Fault, the boundary between the Stawell and Bendigo Zones, is a west-dipping listric reverse fault that intersects the Moyston Fault at a depth of about 22 km, forming a V-shaped geometry. Both the Stawell and Bendigo Zones can be divided broadly into a lower crustal region of interlayered and imbricated metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks and an upper crustal region of tightly folded metasedimentary rocks. The Stawell Zone was probably part of a Cambrian accretionary system along the eastern Gondwanaland margin, and mafic rocks may have been partly consumed by Cambrian subduction. Much of the Early Cambrian oceanic crust beneath the Bendigo Zone was not subducted, and is preserved as a crustal-scale imbricate thrust stack. The seismic data have shown that a thin-skinned structural model appears to be valid for much of the Melbourne Zone, whereas the Stawell and Bendigo Zones have a thick-skinned structural style. Internal faults in the Stawell and Bendigo Zones are mostly west-dipping listric faults, which extend from the surface to near the base of the crust. The Heathcote Fault Zone, the boundary between the Bendigo and Melbourne Zones, extends to at least 20 km, and possibly to the Moho. A striking feature in the seismic data is the markedly different seismic character of the mid to lower crust of the Melbourne Zone. The deep seismic reflection data for the Melbourne Zone have revealed a multilayered crustal structure that supports the Selwyn Block model.
Keywords:backarc  Bendigo Zone  Governor Fault  Heathcote Fault  Lachlan Orogen  Melbourne Zone  Moyston Fault  orogenic gold  seismic reflection  Selwyn Block  Stawell Zone  Tabberabbera Zone  tectonics  Victoria  
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