Abstract

The transect from the Exmouth Plateau to the Argo Abyssal Plain drilled during ODP Legs 122 and 123 documents a margin comparable to Tethyan Mesozoic margins, but major evolutionary steps, dated in Neotethys as Early to Middle Jurassic, took place here in the Early Cretaceous. Oceanic basement in the Argo Abyssal Plain is overlain by lowest Cretaceous red-brown quartzose siltstones and bentonites, which, in turn, are overlain by Neocomian red claystones with subordinate radiolarite interbeds. This indicates sea-floor spreading began in the earliest Cretaceous and not in the Callovian-Oxfordian, as had been postulated. Although the Neocomian sedimentary facies compare well to coeval Tethyan analogs, the well-preserved Neocomian radiolarian assemblages of the Argo basin have little in common with Tethyan assemblages. This suggests the Argo basin was paleo-oceanographically distinct from Neotethys due to paleogeographic separation from Tethys and/or owing to a higher Neocomian paleolatitude. The authors observations do not seem to document the breakup history of Neotethys (Gondwana breakup) but instead indicate a much younger secondary breakup that occurred possibly continentward of an older ocean basin.

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