Abstract

A tectonic mélange containing blueschists and eclogites, Middle Ordovician mid-ocean ridge basalt, cherts, and clastic sediments occurs at Port Macquarie in the southern New England Orogen, Australia. The clastics are quartz-poor and are dominated by mafic volcanic and fragmented plagioclase clasts; felsic volcanic clasts are less common. They exhibit erosional bases, graded bedding, load structures, and lithologies ranging from laminated mudstones to pebbly sandstones. Based on these features, they are interpreted as turbidites. During subduction, these turbidites were deformed and metamorphosed under prehnite–pumpellyite and lower greenschist facies conditions. Geochemically, they have a calc-alkaline, intra-oceanic arc signature; show no recycling; and have been derived from a provenance dominated by mafic volcanic rocks of basaltic-andesite composition. Further, chemical index of alteration (44–69) and Index of Compositional Variability (0.8–2.4) data reveal they show little weathering and are immature. The lack of weathering of rocks in a location where tropical climatic conditions existed is attributed to extreme erosion associated with a dynamic setting resulting in rapid transportation of the sediments to the fore arc basin and subsequently to the trench. As a consequence, little time was available for weathering to take place. The detritus in the turbidites is thought to have been derived from Late Ordovician volcanics in the Macquarie Arc and fore arc basin sequences of the Murrawong Formation. The cherts with which they are associated record both a continental and oceanic arc geochemical signature.

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