Abstract

Cenozoic geology of Woodlark Island was influenced by events prior to the onset of continental rifting at ca 8 Ma and the slightly later commencement of seafloor spreading in the eastern Woodlark Basin between ca 6 and 3.6 Ma. The embryonic Woodlark Island consisted of latest Paleocene(?)–Eocene shallow marine, deep-water shelf and turbidite deposits (Loluai Formation) and small submarine and emergent mafic volcanic centres (Utavai Basalt Member). Platform carbonates extended across the Woodlark Basin in the late Oligocene–middle Miocene (Nasai Limestone). Onset of middle Miocene eruptions in the north-northeast-trending Okiduse Volcanic Zone (OVZ) was localised in the similarly trending Kulumadau Horst and Graben Zone (KHGZ). Volcanic centres flanked major structures in the 12.5 km wide horst and graben zone, suggesting a link between volcanism and extensional tectonics. It was not an island arc settling, and there are neither andesites nor an obvious subduction zone. Offshore the KHGZ is connected with the similarly trending Nubara Fault, the plate boundary between the Solomon Sea Plate and Woodlark Plate. Contrasting volcanic deposits were erupted from volcanoes of the OVZ, viz. Mt Kabat Eruptive Centre, Uvarakoi Caldera, Watou Mountain Eruptive Centre and Suloga Harbour Tuff Cone. The epithermal Busai and Kulumadau gold deposits are located in the KHGZ. They are hosted by porous and permeable crystal lithic lapilli tuff beds in the Monasiy Tuff (Uvarakoi Caldera). Emplacement of thick dolerite sills (Auyed Dolerite) occurred post-middle Miocene. Sill emplacement coincided with the ca 6–3.6 Ma commencement of seafloor spreading in the eastern Woodlark Basin. A major phase of extensional tectonics along the KHGZ commenced post-middle Miocene and has persisted to the Holocene. Uplift was accompanied by rapid erosion and the widespread deposition of poorly to chaotically sorted gravels (Na’ku’iel Conglomerate). KEY POINTS Middle Miocene volcanism occurred from four volcanic centres in the north-northeast-trending Okiduse Volcanic Zone. Volcanism was confined to the similarly north-northeast-trending Kulumadau Horst and Graben Zone. Volcanism was not located in an island arc setting, as there are neither andesites nor an obvious subduction zone. A major phase of extensional tectonics along the horst and graben zone commenced post-middle Miocene and has persisted to the Holocene. Both the epithermal Busai and Kulumadau gold deposits exhibit lithological controls (porosity and permeability) on ore deposition.

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