Abstract

First‐order topographical features at high‐elevation passive margins have the potential to store information about the early stages of continental rifting, which are usually lost in the sediment record. In this study we present a new combination of apatite fission track and (U‐Th)/He analyses from two coast‐perpendicular traverses to decipher the time of formation and evolution of the escarpment at the southeastern Australian margin. A combination of inverse and forward modeling of the apatite fission track (AFT) and He data indicates that the coast experienced a rapid denudational event starting at 110 ± 10 Ma, at least 15 Myr before seafloor spreading (85 Ma), in agreement with the hypothesis that rifting at magma‐poor margins evolves slowly. Thus the enhanced denudation is not related to the synbreakup base level drop, but it may have been related to a thermally driven transient surface uplift. Considerations on isostatic flexure and rigidity of the lithosphere indicate that unless significant synrift brittle movements are assumed to have occurred along margin‐parallel faults that are no more visible, the coast must have experienced a higher geothermal gradient than normal. The evolution of the rest of the coastal plain may have taken up to ∼90 Myr, in agreement with numerical models of passive margins evolution. The (U‐Th)/He ages across the coastal plain are consistent with an in‐place‐excavation scenario of a high rift shoulder, and they rule out the possibility of a constant retreat of the escarpment. AFT + He data from the plateau indicate that the highlands remained stable throughout continental breakup, experiencing rates of erosion of 5–10 m/Myr since, at least, 200 Ma.

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