Abstract

In South Island, New Zealand, the Otago schist, 30,000 square km in extent, consists mainly of greenschist facies quartzo-feldspathic metagreywacke and meta-argillite with minor metavolcanics and metacherts. Before metamorphism the sediments were probably Carboniferous to Jurassic; the flanking, steeply dipping greywackes are Triassic in the northeast and southeast, and Permian in the west and southwest. Regional metamorphism culminating in the Late Jurassic was accompanied by pervasive deformation generating a variety of interrelated folds on all scales. The scarcity of distinctive reference units makes recognition of macroscopic structures difficult, and much progress has depended on observations of vergence of mesoscopic folds interpreted as defining macroscopic folds having axial plane separation of between 2 km and 6 km. At least two phases of synmetamorphic deformation are distinguishable locally, but regionally have an overlapping multiphase relationship. The regional schistosity structure is an irregular flat-crested antiform trending S and SE. The internal megascopic structure defined by the mesoscopic folds, appears to consist of a stack of nappe-folds facing east and northeast, which pass into reclining isoclinal folds in the west, southwest and north-east, and is interpreted to be a megaculmination. Mineral and textural metamorphic zones were developed during deformation, and a relatively simple regional pattern established at a late stage by continuing recrystallisation. The Otago schist originated in a complex sequence of Paleozoic—Mesozoic plate interactions near the southwest Pacific margin of Gondwanaland. It included part of a volcaniclastic frontal arc-basin assemblage (Murihiku and Caples Terranes) lying north or northeast of an older crystalline foreland, and a quartzo-feldspathic assemblage of plutonic-metamorphic provenance lying further to the northeast (Torlesse Terrane). Parts of these terranes underwent mainly greenschist facies metamorphism during Late Jurassic subduction-collision to form the Haast Schist Terrane of which the Otago schist is a major part. The earliest Torlesse sediments are thought to have prograded as a vast fan complex onto oceanic crust from the southwesterly crystalline foreland in the Carboniferous, then in the Permian were separated from their source by a spreading zone which thereafter isolated them from the sedimentary province of the newly developing arc system. Tectonic recycling of these sediments at a Permian to Jurassic oceanic subduction zone is considered to have developed the westward progradation features and the products of limited vulcanism found in the present Torlesse Terrane. The New Zealand Geosyncline appears to have consisted of a spreading zone between two inwardly facing convergent zones, one flanked by a foreland to the southwest, the other wholly oceanic. The metamorphic climax of the Rangitata Orogeny was the result of the medial spreading zone passing into the westerly subduction zone, so permitting the convergent zones to collide, with the Torlesse sediments caught between them. The mantle system driving the spreading zone appears to have continued to function, and soon after the collisional climax caused Late Jurassic—Cretaceous rifting of the sialic edge of Gondwanaland, igneous activity, differential shear of the New Zealand region, and initiation of the Alpine Fault. It subsequently commenced sea-floor spreading in the Tasman Sea, and later in the southwest Pacific Ocean.

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