Abstract
Volcanic rocks occur in different types of sedimentary basins, especially those evolving from lithospheric stretching. While volcanoes and other igneous rocks are widespread in the onshore Otway Basin, well-preserved volcanoes have not been documented in the offshore portion of the basin. Here, we analysed high-quality 2-D and 3-D seismic reflection datasets to investigate the origin and distribution of the enigmatic, kilometre-scale buried mound-shaped structures in the Prawn Platform, offshore Otway Basin. Detailed seismic characterisation enabled the identification of 19 mounds, ranging from ~90–400 m in height and 1.8–6 km in diameter. Relatively small (~0.2–11 km2) igneous sills are associated with these mounds. Based on their external geometries and internal seismic architectures, we interpret these mounds as dyke-fed shield volcanoes. Distinct seismic facies characterise the buried volcanoes, including the main volcanic eruption centre, tuff cone, and pyroclastic mass-wasting deposits. Interbedded extrusive and sedimentary rocks are mainly observed within volcanoes over 250 m high, and are associated with gullies along their flanks, indicating these volcanoes may have been subject to erosion. The volcanoes occur at three stratigraphic levels: late Eocene (~37 Ma), mid-Oligocene (~27–29 Ma), and early Miocene (~20 Ma), within the age of the Older Volcanics of the southern Australian margin. We propose that this newly discovered volcanism in the offshore Otway Basin was caused by edge-driven convection (similar mechanism to adjacent onshore volcanism), associated with the fast spreading rate of the Southern Ocean since the late Eocene (~40 Ma). The discovery of these buried volcanoes extends our understanding of magmatism in the Otway Basin, especially regarding the offshore extension of the Older Volcanics.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 104747 |
Journal | Marine and Petroleum Geology |
Volume | 123 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jan 2021 |
Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2020 Elsevier Ltd
Keywords
- Buried volcanoes
- Igneous sills
- Offshore Otway Basin
- Seismic reflection data
- Volcanic seismic facies
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Oceanography
- Geophysics
- Geology
- Economic Geology
- Stratigraphy