- Geology of Tasmania
Tasmania has a varied geological history, with the world's biggest exposure of diabase, or dolerite. Rocks from theNeoproterozoic ,Paleozoic andMesozoic time periods appear. It is one of the few southern hemisphere areas glaciated during thePleistocene with glacial landforms in the higher parts. The west coast is a significant mineralisation area with major mines and numerous historical mining locations.Geological history
Graphical timeline
title=Tasmanian Geological Timeline
align=right
width=20
from=-1400
to=0
period1=Stenian
period2=Tonian
period3=Cryogenian
period4=Ediacaran
period5=Cambrian
period6=Ordovician
period7=Silurian
period8=Devonian
period9=Carboniferous
period10=Triassic
period11=Permian
period12=Jurassic
period13=Cretaceous
period14=Tertiary
period15=Quaternary
period16=Ectasian
note1=Separation from Antarctica
note1-at=-47
note2=Glaciation ends
note2-at=-.016
note3=Tyennan Orogeny
note3-at=-500
note4=Granite in the west
note4-at=-417
note5=Granite in the east
note5-at=-367
note6=Oldest Tasmanian rock
on King Island
note6-at=-1270
note7=Strathgordon phyllite
note7-at=-1125
note8=Lyell Highway metamorphosed siltstone
note8-at=-1300
note9=arc continent collision
note9-at=-525
note10=Orogeny
note10-at=-700
note11=Massive dolerite intrusion
note11-at=-174.5
note12=Permian glaciation
note12-at=-299
note13=Marinoan Glaciation
note13-at=-635
note14=Sturtian glaciation
note14-at=-725
caption=An approximate time-scale of events
in the Geological history ofTasmania .
Axis scale is in millions of years ago.The earliest geological history is recorded in rocks from over Ma|1270. These older rocks fromwestern Tasmania and King Island were strongly folded and metamorphosed into rocks such asquartzite . After this there are many signs ofglaciation from thesnowball earth time, theCryogenian , as well as theglobal warming that occurred at the start of theEdiacaran period. An Orogeny folded the olderPrecambrian rocks. In the Cambrian time the Tyennan block forming the south west and central Tasmania, was pushed up and slightly over the land of north west Tasmania, the Tyennan Orogeny. Then there were Volcanic action and sediments from the theCambrian andOrdovician . The large ore deposits were formed on the west coast. The north east of Tasmania began to form as part of theLachlan Orogen with turbidity flows of mud and sand on to the ocean floor. In the Devonian the Taberabban Orogeny caused more folding, and intrusion ofgranite on the west and east coasts, and probably joined the east of Tasmania to the west.In the
Permian period conditions were again glacial and the Tasmania basin formed, with low sea levels in theTriassic . A giant intrusion of magma happened in theJurassic forming diabase, or dolerite which gives many of the Tasmanian mountains their characteristic appearance. Continental breakup happened in theCretaceous andTertiary Period, splitting off undersea plateaus, formingBass Strait and ultimately breaking Tasmania away fromAntarctica . In theTertiary a couple of basins extended inland fromMacquarie Harbour and the northernMidlands . The higher mountains were glaciated during thePleistocene .Precambrian
The oldest rocks in Tasmania from the
Precambrian form several blocks. The blocks are King Island; Rocky Cape in the North West, Dundas Element in the mid west; Sheffield Element in the central north; Tyennan Element in the west central and south west; and the Adamsfield-Jubilee Element in the south central to south coast.On
King Island now inBass Strait , the oldest Tasmanian rocks are found. On the west side of King Island there arebasalt s that have been metamorphosed byamphibolite grade metamorphism at Ma|1270.R A Glen: [http://www.igcp.itu.edu.tr/Publications/Glen_06.pdf "The Tasmanides of eastern Australia"] ] Sedimentary rocks such as feldspathic sandstone that have been altered toschist andquartzite . Adolerite sill was intruded. Granite intruded Ma|760 in theCryogenian . The granite contains inheritedzircon s from Ma|1800|1200. The Wickham deformation affected the earlier rocks by heating to 470 to 480 °C at pressures below 300MPa , and tight folding. This was followed later in theNeoproterozoic on the eastern side of the island with beds ofdiamictite ,dolomite ,mudstone ,tholeiite , andpicrite interleaved withconglomerate . Also dykes ofaugite syenite , picrite and tholeiite dolerite were intruded. An interpretation is that deposits occurred in a tidal area, with a continentalrift allowingmagma from the mantle to intrude. These newer Proterozoic sediments were then tilted and faulted.In the Rocky Cape Block west of Wynyard and north of Granville Harbour, the Precambrian rocks consist of the Rocky Cape group from the
Stenian period, with CowrieSiltstone , Detention Subgroup, Irby Siltstone, and Jacob Quartzite. The sequence covers most of the element and is over 5700 meters thick. Currents travelled either northwesterly or southeasterly. The metamorphic belt titled the Arthur Lineament forms the limits of the Rocky Cape Group to the south east. The Burnie Formation followed in theTonian period south east of the lineament withgreywacke and slaty mudstone, and also some basicpillow lava s. The Oonah Formation has even more varieties of rock than the Burnie formation, also including conglomerate, quartz sandstone, dolomite andchert . The Bowry Formation in theCryogenian Ma|780 was intruded by granite (Bowry granitoids) Ma|777. These have been metamorphosed to theblueschist level. In the Smithton Synclinorium the Togari Group followed with conglomerate from the Sturtian andMarinoan glaciation s and dolomite marking the end of Cryogenian and on into theEdiacaran andCambrian . The Togari group contains greywacke, conglomerate,diamictite , mafic volcanic rocks, and quartz sandstone, and mudstone. The components of the Togari Group are called Forest Conglomerate and Quartzite, Black River Dolomite, Kanunnah subgroup (containg the lavas) and Smithton Dolomite. These rocks are important for determining the boundary between theCryogenian andEdiacaran periods as they contain volcanics that can be dated and dolostones marking the end of glaciations and marking the period boundary.Near
Corinna the Ahrberg group is correlated with the the Togari Group and the Success Creek Group. It contains Donaldson Formation (a marine fan), Savage Dolomite which containsstromatolite s; Bernafai Volcanics containingalbite epidote actinolite chlorite; Corinna Dolomite, and Tunnelrace Volcanics. Where the dolomite has been dissolved away over million of years it has left layers of very puresilica flour, an important mineral resource.The Dundas Element lowest level starts with the Oonah Formation with greywacke, dolomite and basic volcanics. The Oonah Formation appeared between Ma|708|690. It has three sections, Mt Bischoff Inlier, the Ramsay River Inlier and the Dundas Inlier. The Success Creek Group from the Cryogenian has diamictite, quartz sandstone (Dalcoath Formation), and mudstone. It includes the Renison Bell Formation named after the
Renison Bell mine. The red rock member ishematite stained chert. The sediments slumped while soft forming folds andbreccia andmélange . They were then capped withlimestone . The group is up to 1000 meters thick. The Crimson Creek Formation consists of greywacke with tholeiitic basalt. It is from 4000 to 5000 meters thick. This formation could be as late as the earlyCambrian . The basalt is probably the same as mafic lavas of the Kanunnah Subgroup.The Sheffield Element extends from Wynyard past Devonport and the Asbestos Range on the north coast and as far south east as Golden Valley. It contains structural elements called Dial Range Trough, Forth Massif, Fossey Mountains Trough. The oldest Precambrian rocks are the Ulverstone Metamorphic Complex and Forth Metamorphic Complex. This is assumed to be the same age as metamorphic rocks from the Tyennan Block, at Ma|1100 from the
Stenian . This contains zircons predominately dated Ma|1796, but also from 1710, 1851, the oldest being Ma|3100, and the youngest Ma|1400. The Burnie or Oonah Formation with Greywacke is possibly from the Tonian period, dated around Ma|735|error=35 . Slate from both the Burnie and Oonah formations is dated at Ma|690. Both of these formations came from a shallow marine shelf. The Cooee Dolerite intruded the Burnie Formation at Ma|725|error=35. Zircon grains in the Cooee Dolerite are from mostly Ma|1700|1800.The Barrington Chert is finely laminated and has flaggy bedding. It is found in the Dial Range and Fossey Mountain Troughs, up to 1 km thick. The Motton Spilite lies on top of the chert. It consists of pillow lava, massive lava flows, sediments made from volcanic fragments, and chert breccia. The basalt is an ocean floor type. The Badger Head Inlier consists of deformed Burnie Formation. The Andersons Creek Ultramafic Complex is west of Beaconsfield and east of the inlier with
serpentinite ,pyroxenite ,gabbro and a sliver of oolitic chert introduced as a fault bounded block. To the west of the Badger Head Inlier is the Port Sorell Formation, a tectonic mélange of marine sediments and dolerite. In the Tyennan block, the Precambrian basement that forms the central core of Tasmania there are two formations. First, the Oonah Formation containsturbidite with quartzsandstone interbedded withsiltstone deposited by gravity flows. This has been deformed with tight folds that have been overturned, and exhibits crenulation cleavage and brittle faulting. Zircons in the quartzite have peak numbers aged Ma|1681 and Ma|1771. Secondly, the Scotchfire Metamorphic Complex containsquartzite deposited in the sea from windblown desert sands,schist andphyllite possibly from a delta. Small quantities ofdolomite and boulderconglomerate are also included. The complex includes boudinage structure and "en echelon" veins.Kathryn Harris: [http://www.utas.edu.au/scieng/nexus/nexus_v1/nexus1_pdfs/nexus9kh.pdf "The Geology of Central Western Tasmania: Context for a Major Mineralised Province", in "Journal of Undergraduate Science Engineering and Technology"] ] Phyllitenear Strathgordon has been dated at Ma|1100|1150. Metamorphism to greenschist facies occurred at around 400° and 300Mpa. The Franklin Metamorphic Complex is near Mount Franklin. At Raglan Range the rocks are a mixture of quartzite and knottedschist . Metamorphism in this area was higher grade withalmandine garnet forming. The Collingwood area experienced the highest grade of metamorphism with garnet-mica schist, mica schist and garnet-mica-kyanite gneiss present, and enough heat to form veins ofmigmatite .Eclogite and garnet amphibolite are believed to be the remains of basalt. The eclogite has been heated to 700° at 1520 MPa, a burial depth of perhaps 50 km. Metamorphism happened Ma|496|515 at the same time as theCambrian ultramafic complexes were introduced.In the Neoproterozoic in the Jane River basin, the very thick Jane River Dolomite appeared.
The Adamsfield Jubilee element is east of the Tyennan Block. It has a strip exposed on the surface that includes the Florentine Synclinorium, The Adamsfield District, the Jubilee Region, and down to the South Coast at Precipitous Bluff and Surprise Bay. It also underlies the Tasmania Basin across southeastern Tasmania, but not including the east coast. The subsurface structure has been studied from a few outliers, boreholes,
xenolith s, and gravity and magentic surveys. The basement at 5 km deep is the same as the Tyennan metamorphic rocks (Scotchfire Metamorphic Complex). Its oldest exposed rocks are from the Clark Group, of pelitic rocks, some withstromatolite s, andevaporite s, and overlaid with orthoquartzite. The Weld River Group lies above, starting with 0.5 km thickness of conglomerate and sandstone, then up to 3 km ofdolostone , interbedded with sandstone, mudstone and diamictite. Glacial dropstones are found in the interbedding, suggesting Cryogenian age, howevercarbon isotope results suggest Ediacaran age instead. Gravity and magnetic studies indicate that this sort of dolomite (dense and non-magnetic) underlies Hobart and Bruny Island in a north south strip, and also in a region west of Hobart.The Cape Sorell Block is a region of metamorphosed sediments from the
Mesoproterozoic , to the south of the west end of Macquarie Harbour. It is separated fromNeoproterozoic rocks by a low anglethrust fault . The Neoproterozoic rocks contain greywacke, mudstone and pillow lavas of the Lucas Creek Volcanics (matching the CrimsonCreek Formation), mudstone, siltstone (matching the Success Creek Group) and dolomite (correlating with the Togari Group). South east of this is a metamorphosed belt of dolomite rich sediments correlated with the Oonah Formation. An ultramafic belt called Point Hibbs Mélange reaches the coast near Point Hibbs. This has been complexly faulted with Cambrian,Ordovician andDevonian sediments and limestone.At the end of the Precambrian uplift there were several raised blocks forming land above the sea: the Tyennan Uplift in the central and south west Tasmania, the Rocky Cape uplift in the north west, and the Forth uplift, near Forth in the north. The far north west also had uplift as probably also did some region to the east. Basins formed were the Smithton Basin, Dial Range Basin, Fossey Mountain Basin and the Adamsfield Basin.
Early Cambrian
Next an oceanic arc collided with eastern Australia. This resulted in deep oceanic crust being thrust in a sheet over the top of the Precambrian rocks. This has left behind several
ultramafic complexes bounded with faults from the older rocks. These take the form of layeredpyroxenite anddunite ; layered dunite, andharzburgite ; and layered pyroxenite, peridotite andgabbro . The layering has developed sedimentary like structures. This has been serpentinised, withmagnetite separating out. Several mineral deposits are associated such asosmiridium , andchromium . The ultrabasic rocks are rich in orthopyroxene, which is unusual, usually clinopyroxene is found. They were formed at high termperature but low pressure. The Heazlewood Ultramafic Complex solidified at Ma|510|error=6. Other ultramaphic occurrences are called Cape Sorell and Serpentine Hill Complex.As part of this collision, three exotic suites of basalt were tectonically introduced into the Dundas Block. Near Waratah is a sub-alkaline basalt from an ocean floor, another is a high-magnesium
andesite -basalt withchrome spinel and clinoenstatite named boninitic rock after theBonin Islands . This magma produced the layered pyroxenite dunite in the ultramafic area. Thirdly there is a lowtitanium basalt-andesite with extreme lightrare earth element depletion that produced the layered pyroxenite-peridotite and associated gabbro cumulate.Two kinds of basalt from the Birchs Inlet–Mainwaring River Volcanics, occur in a belt north from Veridian Point and west of the south end of Birchs Inlet.
In the Adamsfield area The Ragged Basin Complex is a broken up formation of chert, sandstone, red mudstone and mafic magma derived rocks. The sandstone is derived from metamorphic and volcanic fragments. Ultramafic rocks are serpentinised. They are not
ophiolite s, but instead are cumulates of heavy minerals in a shallow magma chamber. The densest mineral,osmiridium has been concentracted and mined at Adamsfield. These rocks areallochthon ous, meaning that they were inserted into position by tectonic processes.Cambrian
Mount Read Volcanics
The
Mount Read Volcanics are a 250 km long belt that is 10 to 20 km wide attached to the western edge of the Tyennan Block or eastern side of the Dundas Element. The volcanics consist of underwater eruptions interbedded with sediment. A range of lava from basic through intermediate to acid are present along with intrusions and volcanic clastics such asbreccia andpumice . The breccia includes pieces of andesite,dacite and massivesulfide . The massive sulfides were formed byhot spring s on the sea floor. These have becomeore deposts forcopper , lead,zinc andsilver . The volcanics extend south to Elliot Bay. The Noddy Creek Volcanics extend north of high Rocky Point to Macquarie Harbour with pyroxene and feldspar containing andesite as lava, breccia and instrusives.The Sticht Range Beds form a sedimentary base sitting on the Tyennan Block metamorphic rocks. Parts of the volcanics were from Ma|502.6|error=3.5, and the younger Tyndall Groups has a dating of Ma|494|error=3.8. Fossils also indicate a late middle Cambrian age. Zircons in the volcanics have two age groups: Ma|1600|800 matching the metamorphic rock in the Tyennan block; and Ma|600|530 without a satisfactory explanation.
In the Dial Range Trough the middle Cambrian saw the deposition of the the Cateena Group of conglomerate (of purple mudstone pebbles), sandstone with feldspar, mudstone and greywacke and some felsic volcanics. The age is
Florian toUndillan . This was followed by the Radfords Creek Group which has a base of a conglomerate of chert and basalt fragments. The age isBoomerangian to LateMindyallan .In the Adamsfield area the Trial Ridge Beds, Island Road Formation, and Boyd River Formation consists of conglomerate and greywacke. They contain fossils of
agnostoid s.Cambrian granites
The Murchison Granite intruded east of the Mount Read Volcanics. It consists of dioritic granodiorite. Major mineral deposits were formed at
Mount Lyell ,Roseberry and Henty. Granite also intruded in the Cambrian at Low Rocky Point and Elliott Bay.The north west element was altered by the Tyennan Orogeny around Ma|500. The Arthur Lineament was metamorphosed to phyllite, slate and
schist osequartzite , The Burnie and Oonah Formation were folded in various ways, and the Rocky Cape Group andthe Smithton Synclinorium developed cleavege texture. The Tyennan Orogeny corresponds with the first phase of theDelamerian Orogeny inSouth Australia and the Ross Orogeny in NorthVictoria Land ,Antarctica .The Dove Granite intrudes the Tyennan Block metamorphics as having several small plugs in the north at Ma|483|error=35.
Dundas Group
The Dundas group are Cambrian sedimentary beds that interfinger with the Mount Read Volcanics. They lie unconformably on the Precambrian basement. The kind of rock is sandstone, laminated mudstone and a pebble conglomerate in which the pebbles consist of quartzite, sandstone and green mudstone. The group was formed as a submarine fan. The conglomerate includes volcanic fragments where it borders the Mount Read Volcanics, indicating that it was deposited at the same time. The Huskisson Group is from the same time period.
In the Smithton Synclinorium the Scopus Formation is from the same period between
Boomerangian andIdamean . The rocks arewacke and mudstone in a submarine fan with currents flowing to the north. A channel is marked by conglomerate. Most of the material came from volcanics, but also included grit from the older Precambrian rocks.The Fossey Mountains Trough contains Cambrian intermediate volcanics, and greywacke where trilobite fossils show the age as late Middle Cambrian. Boomerangian age fossils were found in Paradise.
Ordovician
During the
Ordovician Tasmania was near the equator and was joined toGondwana . The Tyennan Block was uplifted with the Great Lyell Scarp as an active fault.The Owen Conglomerate, part of the Denison group lies conformably on the Dundas Group, but unconformably on the Mount Read Volcanics. The pebbles include quartz, quartzite, quartz sandstone, pale pink mudstone and chert, embedded in a matrix of sand. The Owen Group rocks are found on the
West Coast Range . The conglomerate was derived from the the highlands of the uplifted Tyennan Block and is up to 1500 meters thick. The lowest section is the Jukes Conglomerate, with Lower Owen Conglomerate and Middle Owen Conglomerate above. Upper Owen Sandstone is found in Queenstown, it formed while the Great Lyell Fault was moving, resulting in folding of the lower parts. The Pioneer Beds are the top layer, containingchert andchromite . Correllated rocks also occur in a syncline south west of Brichs Inlet, and around the upper part of the Wanderer River, and in the Dial Range Trough the unit is called Duncan Conglomerate. This Duncan Conglomerate has pebbles mostly of chert, but also some of quartzite, limonite or lava. On the west side of the Dial Range trough at Penguuin the Beecraft Megabreccia sits on top of the Burnie Formation. It consists of blocks of chert up to 120 meters long, embedded in conglomerate. The Teatree Point Megabreccia is similar about 150 meters thick. The Lobster Creek Volcanics is actually an intrusion of plagioclase pyroxene hornblende porphyry from Ma|480|error=18.Conglomerate and sandstone in the Fossey Mountains Trough is exposed in a bandon Black Bluff Range, Mount Roland, and Gog Range. Another band runs through St Valentines Peak, Loyetea, Gunns Plains to the Dial Range. On top of this is sandstone, a dolerite sill, and basalts altered to chlorite and hematite. In the past these units were called Roland Conglomerate and Moina Sandstone, but should be termed the middle owen COnglomerate.
The Gordon limestone belongs to the Gordon group. It is formed over western Tasmania and is conformable on the Owen Conglomerate and lies unconformably over the Precambrian rocks north of Zeehan. The limestone occurs in the Dundas and Sheffield Elements and the Florentine Synclinorium. The conditions of its formation were in or near the intertidal zone. The time of its formation was between early
Caradoc and midAshgil . A type section is at Mole Creek. The Flowery GullyLimestone started deposition at an earlier timeLlanvirn orLlandeilo than the limestones further west.In the central north of the Sheffield element is the Early Arenig age Caroline CreekSandstone on a bed of chert conglomerate. The Cabbage Tree Formation is eastof the Andersons Creek Ultramafic Complex, and is standstone and conglomerate.
In North east Tasmania the Mathinna Group starts in the Ordovician with Stony Head Sandstone, a quartz sandstone formed in turbidity flows. Turquoise Bluff Slate formed from clay. Fossils are rare, and ages hard to determine.D. B. Seymour and C. R. Calver [http://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/mrtdoc/dominfo/download/UR1995_01/time_space_v2a.pdf "Time - Space Diagram for Tasmania"] Mineral Resources Tasmania and AGSO 1998; and [http://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/mrtdoc/dominfo/download/UR1995_01/UR1995_01.pdf synthesis] ]
The Wurawina Supergroup formed in the Duck Creek Syncline amoungst other places. This syncline is oriented east-west, located on the west coast south of the mouth of the
Pieman River . It consists of conglomerate equivalent to Mount Zeehan Conglomerate, sandstone, siltstone, shale and micrite equivalent to the Gordon Group, and finally equivalents to the Eldon Group (to Devonian). The Wurawina Supergroup also occurs in the Adamsfield Element with the Denison Group consisting of Singing Creek Formation (of quartzawacke), Great Dome Sandstone, Reeds Conglomerate, Squirrel Creek Formation. Then above this the Gordon Group consists of Karmberg Limestone, Cashions Creek Limestone, Benjamin Limestone, and Arndell Sandstone all from shallow marine conditions. Limestones are also found at Lune River, Precipitous Bluff and produced in deeper water at Surprise Bay on the south Coast.ilurian
The Mathinna Group continued in the
Silurian period with Bellingham Formation and Sidling Sandstone. In western tasmania after the Gordon Group came the Eldon Group consisting of Crotty Quartzite, Amber Slate, Keel Quartzite, Austral Creek Siltstone, Florence Quartzite and Bell Shale. The time of the Eldon group is beweenAeronian andPragian , but with a depositional gap in theLudlow and earlyPridoli .In the Adamsfield element is the Tiger Range Group with Gell Quartzite, Richea Siltstone, Currawong Quartzite and possibly McLeod CreekFormation. Upper layers have been removed by erosion.
Devonian
In early to mid
Devonian theTabberabban Orogeny compressed Tasmania in the east-west direction. Reverse faults were activated, and folding with axes running north west and north-north east were formed. Tight folds were formed with axes in the north south direction at first. Later folding in the northwest to west-northwest direction was superimposed. Faulting relieved some stress and cleavage developed in the rocks. In the Fossey Mountains Trough, the intersecting folds have made dome and basin shaped structures. Uplift and erosion occurred. A quartz-feldspar porphyry intruded the Timbs Group in the southern Arthur Lineament at Ma|380|error=6.In the north east of Tasmania the Mathinna Group received its last deposits in the form of turbidites in the Bellingham Formation and Sidling Sandstone containing more feldspar.
Granites were intruded in the east of Tasmania around Ma|395|368. The St Marys Porphyrite is an
ash flow of dacite from Ma|288|error=1. Three largebatholith s are in the north east: Scottsdale, Eddystone and Blue Tier. Gravity measurements show that granite underlies most of north east Tasmania at depth. Its western edge is a shelf running from Noland Bay in the north to Great Oyster Bay on the east coast. Granite also underlies the east coast with outcrops on Freycinet Peninsula, Maria Island, and Tasman Peninsula and the Hyppolite Rocks. The eastern Bass Strait Islands also show large exposures of granite, including Flinders, Cape Barren, and Clarke Island. Even the Tasmanian islands in the far north of Bass Strait are composed of granite, including Rodondo Island, Moncoeur Island, Kent Group including Deal Island, and Judgement Rocks. ["Small Bass Strait Island Reserves Draft Management Plan" Parks and Wildlife Service, Department of Primary Industries, Water and Environment 2000] Hogan Island and Curtis Island. These islands formed a land bridge in the last ice age and butt up againstWilsons Promontory in Victoria. In the Blue Tier Granite,granodiorite came first.Adamellite intruded, named Mt Pearson Pluton and feeding the St Marys Porphyrite at Ma|398|388. A second stage of adamellite came at Ma|408 and alkali-feldspar granite derived by fractional crystallisation followed at Ma|374|364. Similar ages and sequences of types apply to the other batholiths. In the batholiths there are quartz-feldspar porphyry and dolerite dykes.S-type granite is only found for sure in the Eddystone Batholith in the most extreme north east. Away from the east theI-type granite proportion increases.Veins of gold were crystallised in the Mathinna-Alberton GoldLineament, a line from Scottsdale to Blue Tier. The
Scamander field originated from the edge of the Mt Pearson biotite adamellite-granite pluton, containingtungsten -molybdenum ,tin -copper andsilver -lead -zinc veins.Folding and foliation occurred in northeast Tasmania during the Devonian after the granites appeared.
The Eldon Group finished forming in a shallow marine environment with quartz sandstone and mudstone lying conformably on the Gordon Group rocks. Fossils include
brachiopod s,gastropod s,bryozoan s andtentaculite s.Granite
In the west of the state there were thirteen small granitic intrusions around Ma|367|error=10. The western plutons were associated with mineralization at Zeehan.
The Heemskirk Granite is a D-shaped double intrusion of 120 km2. It has two parts, one part red, and another white granite that intrudes the red, it is high in
tourmaline . Mineralisation from the Heemskirk Granite withcassiterite or tin andtungsten skarn , or silver lead and zinc veins occur in the Zeehan field. The Pieman Granite is a similar age at Ma|347|error=9, but without useful mineral deposits. The Cox Bight granite is white aged at Ma|376|error=10. The South West Cape Granite is dated at Ma|319|error=10. It is foliated and white to cream withbiotite andfeldspar in large crystals.P R Williams and E B Corbett, : [http://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/mrtdoc/dominfo/download/ERSK55_7/ERSK55_7.pdf "Geological Survey Explanatory Report Geological Atlas 1:250,000 series sheet SK55/7 Port Davey"] 1977 ISBN 0 7246 0473 1]The Meredith Batholith contains biotite adamellite. It contains ten separate plutons. A contact aureole of 2.5 km thickness surrounds the batholith in the form of
albite epidote hornfels . The graite formed Ma|366|338.5. Geophysical exploration and a borehole has revealed a large granite mass a kilometer below Zeehan, Renison, Dundas, Rosebery mineral fields. This is the Heemskirk–Granite Tor subsurface ridge. Lamprophyre dykes near Queenstown is Ma|363|error=3. The Grandfathers Granite is an adamellite under 2 km deep south and offshore from Cape Sorell. It has a few isolated outcrops on the surface.Lamprophyre dykes and sheets have intruded at Hibbs Bay and nearby on the south west coast Ma|373.4|error=4.1.The Housetop Granite outcrops over 120 km2 at the western end of the Sheffield Element. It is a biotite granite solidified Ma|380|343. It produced some mineral veins with lead, silver, zinc, copper and tin-tungsten skarn at Kara. The Dolcoath Granite outcrops near Cethana but extends underground to the west. It has produced
magnetite -fluorite -vesuvianite mineral deposts at Moina, and tin tungstenbismuth veins at the Shepherd and Murphy Mine. The Beulah Granite outcrops near Paradise and Beulah and it extends underground to the north and west.Granite Tor Granite as it appears on the surface is just a small part of a large buried granite body that may connect with the Heemskirk Granite. Its age is Ma|359|error=15.
Carboniferous
On the eastern side of King Island some small stocks of granite with dykes intruded. The granites are adamellite-granodiorite with large crystals of
K-feldspar . They are around Ma|350. They are known as Grassy Granodiorite,and Bold Head Adamellite in the south east, and Sea Elephant Adamellite on the north east is richer in feldspar.Megakinking caused shortening in the NNW-SSE direction in north east Tasmania with blocks up to 9 km across rotated.Permian
In the
Permian , glacial conditions predominated with,icecap s on the land, and ice floating on the sea, as a result of whichtillite is found at the base of the Permian deposits.Mudstone withdropstone s was formed in the sea areas, particularly in the eastern half of Tasmania. This eastern zone is known as the Tasmania Basin. The rocks are undeformed and cover the central part of the state, most of the east coast, down to the south coast, and with extensions to the north coast near Launceston and Devonport. What is now visible has been reduced by erosion.The Permian and
Triassic deposits together are known as the Parmeener Super Group. The lowest levels are a discontinuous dark grey pebblytillite up to several hundreds of meters thick. It has been found at Cygnet (Truro Tillite), Glenorchy, Margate, Woodbridge, Maydena, Shoemaker Point and Hastings.Mount Anne ,Mount Mueller , andMount Wedge are the most south west extension of the tillite. In the north it occurs at Wynyard as the Wynyard Tillite. In the west is the Zeehan Tillite. The broken fragments of rocks are often faceted and scratched, and can be up to boulder sized. They are embedded in rock flour and silt. The ice that brought the till flowed from the west of Tasmainia in an easterly direction. The tillite may have started appearing in the Late Carboniferous.Siltstone with
varve s is found at Maydena, it is called laminite. Above the tillite is massive mudstone and siltstone with occasional dropstones, the Woody Island Siltstone in southern Tasmania and Quamby Mudstone in the northern half. The upper levels of the marine sequence are silstone and sandstone with frequent dropstones and fossils. These are the Bundella Formation and Golden Valley Group.Oil shale forms a layer in the north and at Douglas River in the east. The shale is known astasmanite . Above this are freshwater deposits of conglomerate, sandstone with pebbles, siltstone with quartz or mica. These freshwater beds can be up to 30m thick. They are called Faulkner Group, the Liffey Group and the Mersey coal Measures. Above this in south east Tasmania are more marine units that include Nassau Formation Berriedale Limestone, up to 60 m thick, siltstone and sandstone rich in fossils and dropstones (Malbina Formation, andDeep Bay Formation), and the upper part is dark grey siltstone rich in dropstones. The very top layers are coloured black, probably from an estuary (Risdon Sandstone and the Abels Bay Formation).Felsic volcanic ash is found near the top of the sequence of sediments.Fresh water deposits form the Upper Parmeener Super Group. The layer commence with poorly cemented sandstone, mudstone, carbonaceous mudstone and
coal (Cygnet Coal Measures).Glossopteris is frequently found as well asDulhuntyspora . In the past coal was mined at Mount Cygnet and Adventure BayN Farmer: [http://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/mrtdoc/dominfo/download/ERSK55_8/ERSK55_8.pdf "Geological Survey Explanatory Report Geological Atlas 1:250,000 series sheet SK55/8 Hobart"] 1979 ISBN 0 7246 0486 3] and atMount Ossa . These sandstones were laid down by east flowing rivers.Triassic
Continental conditions resulted in sandstone deposits, which contain small
dinosaur remains. TheTriassic sediments are also part of the the Parmeener Super Group. The lowest levels are a sparkling clean quartz sandstone free of coal. The uppermost parts have sandstone and beds of coal. Coal was mined at Newtown, Kaoota, Mount Lloyd, Strathblane, and on theTasman Peninsula . The sandstone has also been heavily used as building stone.At St Marys there were two
volcanic eruptions of alkali-olivine basalt at Ma|233|error=5.Tuff from calc-alckaline vulcanoes to the east of Tasmania pruduced some layers in the upper sediments. One ashfall at the top of the Carnina is dated at Ma|214|error=1.Jurassic
A major intrusion of
dolerite occurred in theJurassic . This was a widespread phenomena covering over one third of Tasmania, and possibly more in the past. This intrusion also affected Antarctica,Argentina andSouth Africa at Ma|183. This has been called theKaroo-Ferrar large igneous province . Three to five million cubic kilometers ofmagma were intruded overall, being the planet's fourth largest known magma intrusion. [AfterOntong Java Plateau ,Deccan Traps and theSiberian Traps .] This caused theToarcian extinction due to an oceanicanoxic event . Henrik Svensen claimed that the magma baked coal andoil shale producing up to 27.4 teratonnes ofcarbon dioxide , some of which entered theEarth's atmosphere . [Michael Reilly, [http://www.newscientist.com/channel/life/mg19626330.400-mass-extinctions-the-armageddon-factor.html "The Armageddon factor"] in "New Scientist "8 December 2007 page 42-45]Tasmania has the largest exposure of
dolerite in the world of 30000 km2 and a volume of 15000 km3.D. B. Seymour, G. R. Green and C. R. Calver: [http://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/mrtdoc/dominfo/download/GSB72_2/GSB72_2.pdf The Geology and Mineral Deposits of Tasmania: a summary] Tasmanian Geological Survey Bulletin 72, Mineral Resources Tasmania 2007 ISBN 0 7246 4017 7] . In Tasmania the rock is characteristic of many mountains with its columnar joining and dark blue grey colour. The composition is 40%plagioclase , 20%clinopyroxene , 20% quartz, 5%ilmenite and small percentages of potassium feldspar andamphibole . The rock is altered by water tosmectite andkaolinite with quartz being left unaltered. The soil surface concentrateszirconium andtitanium . The soils on dolerite also contain nodules ofhematite and may contain a buried layer of stones called a stone line.Rafael Osok and Richard Doyle: [http://eprints.utas.edu.au/550/ "Soil development on dolerite and its implications for landscape history in southeastern Tasmania"] ]Most of the intrusions are in the form of sills up to 500 m thick. Mostly the sills are in the Parmeener Super Group rocks. There are also stepped sills, inclined sheets, cones and some dykes. Closely adjacent country rocks were metamorphosed to
hornfels . The upper parts of sills may be more coarsely grained. Dolerite is crushed to use as road metal, and aggregate.Mt Anne, Mount Mueller, and Mount Wedge in the south west are capped in dolerite, where it also makes contact with Precambrian rocks.
It appears that the magma came from the crust rather than the mantle. Solidification occurred at Ma|174.5|error=8.
A Jurassic forest was buried in an andestic volcanic eruption at
Lune River . Here beneath the lava flow is mudstone with fossil wood and leaves.On King Island there was an intrusion of a biotite lamprophyre dyke at Ma|143.
Xenolith s ofgranulite -facies metamorphic rock resemble those found in eastern Antarctica.Cretaceous
In the
Cretaceous continental breakup ofGondwana started near Tasmania.About Ma|83 a rift entered the east coast of Tasmania from the south and split off theLord Howe Rise .Sea floor spreading continued to move this continental sliver away to the east from Tasmania and Australia, and the rift jumped into the Lord Howe Rise and separated off the East Tasman Plateau. ThisEast Tasman Plateau microcontinent was originally off the southeast of Tasmania; it is a circular piece of continental rocks surrounded by oceanic crust. Volcanism occurred there Ma|36.In the CretaceousBass Strait was stretched and thinned and became filled with water. Vulcanism occurred in the Bass Basin. Flowering plants moved into Tasmania about Ma|90.At these times Tasmania was still connected to Antarctica with the southwest abuttingOates Land and the Wilson Hills. South from Tasmania is an extension of continental crust called theSouth Tasman Rise , The Gilbert seamount was split from the South Tasman Rise by sea floor spreading about Ma|77.C. Gaina, R. D. Müller, B. Brown and T. Ishihara: [http://www.geosci.usyd.edu.au/users/dietmar/Pdf/Gaina_etal_GSA_SpecPap2003.pdf "Microcontinent formation around Australia"] in Geological Society of Australia Special Publication 22, 2001 page 400-405]This extension created a number of sedimentary basins: Bass, Durroon, Gippsland, Otway and Sorell Basins. They each contain several kilometers of sediment from the late mesozoic to Cainoozoic time periods. Bass Basin, between King Island, and north from the Tamar River, has up to 12 km of sediment, actually starting from the Jurassic. The lowest layer is the Otway Group of sandstone made from rock fragments. The Eastern View CoalMeasures follow. The Latrobe Group found in the Otway Basin, closer to Victoria, is from the same time and produces the oil found in the area. From Late Paleocene to early Eocene there was an unconformity. A shale from Demons Bluff Formation follows in the Eocene, deposited in calm sea water. The Torquay Group reaches from Oligocene to the current day, with
marl and limestone formed in open sea water.The Durroon Basin is south east of the Bass Basin. Late Cretaceous rocks are conglomerate, with sandstones above. From Ma|125|100 there was a high thermal gradient of 55° per km. Around Ma|60 there was uplift and erosion of 900 m of sediment called Southern Ocean breakupunconformity. A layer of olivine basalt lies on this, followed by carbonaceous shale for 300 m called Durroon Mudstone Ma|93|85. This was deposited in a lake. Non marine sediment follow from Cretaceous, through Paleocene to Eocene {Ma|83|40. From Ma|40|33 the Demons BluffFormation sandstone formed, and finaly the Torquay Group with more sandstone and shale than in the Bass Basin.
Rocks from the Cretaceous include
syenite porphyry sills and dykes near Cygnet around Ma|100. They intrude the Lower Parmeener Group rocks, and dolerite. There are two kinds of composition, one is high alkali, alumina, silicon and barium containing melanitegarnet ; the other is high in potassium withnepheline andhauyne . This rock isbanatite . Clay from this was mined at Police point, and there are also some gold deposits. There is likely to be a giantlaccolith of syenite below Cygnet.Cape Portland is host to andesite, lamprophyre and porphyrite intrusions and eruptions from Ma|102.3|101.3. Musselroe Bay nearby has a lamprophyre and basalt from Ma|98.7|error=0.8.
Tertiary
Tectonics
Tasmania finally disconnected from Antarctica Ma|45. Several basins were formed by faulting. Faulting was connected with continental breakup. Most faulting was finished by the
Eocene , but the Sorell Basin continued into theOligocene .Tertiary age deposits are found in the northern midlands (Tamar Graben), and south ofMacquarie Harbour in the Macquarie Harbour Graben. In the south east are the Derwent Graben and the Coal River Graben. Thick layers of Tertiary rocks are found in the estuary of the Derwent River,D'Entrecasteaux Channel , Sandy Bay,Taroona , Middleton, Craigow Hill, and Spring Bay. The rocks are mostly silstone and clay. The deep estuary rocks are from thePaleocene .Travertine is found at Geilston Bay.Silcrete andlaterite from this time is found too.The Macquarie Harbour
graben deposits dating from Palaeocene and Eocene are poorly consolodated sand, and gravel, with some beds oflignite and clay. Sediments are up to 500 meters thick, with the lowest layers consisting of dolerite boulders.The Tamar Graben was an extension to the south of the Bass Basin onto the Tasmanian island. Sediments started in the graben at the very end of the Cretaceous, and into the Paleocene and Eocene with conglomerate, sandstone, mudstone and
lignite . Basalt and conglomerate is buried south of White Hills. There is Eocene carbonaceous silt. The Longford Sub-basin extends inland south of the Tamar Graben, and is filled with 800 m of clay, sand and gravel, with some basalt towards the top layers, mostly from the Eocene.The Devonport-Port Sorell Sub-Basin was formed in Paleocene with carbonaceous mudstone and sandstone. The Thirlstane Basalt is above at Ma|38, an alkali-olivine basalt. Then the Wesley Vale Sand follows, and the Moriarty Basalt si 50 meters thick at Ma|29.5.
The Sorell Basin forms the
continental shelf off the west coast. It has sub-basins of King Island, Sandy Cape, Strahan, and Port Davey which were formed in the Early Cretaceous. The King Island Basin is terminated on the east by a normal fault. It is south of King Island and north west of Tasmania. It has a basement of the Rocky Cape Group from the Proterozoic. The first sediments are red conglomerate beds for 190 m. mid-Upper Cretaceous sandstone and mudstone follow, the same age as the Sherbrook Group. Then more conglomerate sandstone and mudstone matching the Wangerrip Group up to early Eocene. Quartz sandstone is above this, with marl, mudstone and limestone fromOligocene andMiocene age. There is anunconformity at thePliocene base. Approximately 4 km of sediment is found in each subbasin.ea level
The sea level was high in the very early Miocene, and sandstone and calcarenite deposits are up to 30 meters above sea level in the north west and on King Island. In the late early Miocene sea level was up to 100 meters higher than now. There is Pliocene limestone on
Flinders Island just above sea level. The Scottsdale sub-basin is up to 225 meters thick from the late Oligocene to early Miocene.Basalt
Volcanic vents opened up Ma|58|8. Lava flows of basalt up to 20 meters thick were formed. Some volcanoes were explosive with bombs, and
pyroclastic tuff . The eruptions are probably from the Oligocene and Miocene. The earliest eruption was at Bream Creek on the east coast at Ma|58.5. From Weldborough it is Ma|47 but mostly eroded.In the south east basalt from Sandy Bay dates from Ma|26.5|error=0.3. Campania has an alkali basalt from Ma|24.2 but it also has younger flows of olivine tholeiites. From near Hobart there is olivine basalt from Ma|23.
In north east Tasmania there are many lava flows from middle Eocene to early Miocene. There are at least four types: alkali olivine basalt, quartz tholeiite Ma|30.7, alkaline basalt, and olivine
nephelinite . Lava flows in the north east flowed down valleys to the sea.In the north west there was so much lava that valleys filled and overflowed. A plain resulted with up to 750 meters thickness, and maximum extent south of Wynyard and Burnie. In the late Eocene and early Oligocene lakes were formed near Waratah. Older alkaline basalt in the north west is from Ma|26.3, at Table Cape
basanite from Ma|13.3 and at Stanley basanite is dated to Ma|12.5 and Ma|8.5. Mount Cameron West has olivine basalt from 15.5 and 14.4 Ma.On the southern part of the Central Plateau there are olivine
melilite nephelinite, olivine nephelinite, quartz tholeiite lava flows. These ran south down tributaries of the Derwent River Ma|24.3|22.4. On the east side of the Central Pateau an olivine nephelinite is from Ma|24.9, and a flow of nephelinehawaiite is from Ma|24.2. In the western Midlands there is basalt from Ma|36.3, and hawaiites from 25 and Ma|24.3.Around Launceston igneous rocks were intruded into Tertiary sediments forming dolerite and monzonite.
Quaternary
In the
Ice age there were valley glaciers and a 1000 km2ice cap .Glaciation on Mount Field occurred 41-44 ka during MIS 3, and 18 ka during MIS 2 with ice free conditions at 16 ka.A. N. Mackintosh, T. T. Barrows E. A. Colhoun and L. K. Fifield: [http://www.victoria.ac.nz/geo/papers/staff/Mackintosh-Barrows-Colhoun-Fifield-JQS-2006.pdf "Exposure dating and glacial reconstruction at Mt. Field, Tasmania, Australia, identifies MIS 3 and MIS 2 glacial advances and climatic variability"] in "Journal of Quaternary Science" Vol. 21(4) p363-376 2006.] The ice cap on the Central Plateau was around 65 km in diameter. Its western limit was theDu Cane Range and Lake St Clair. The central part under the ice cap was eroded. Significant areas of till are found in the central highlands arranged roughly in a circle around the former ice cap. Glaciers flowed out into theFranklin River , the Canning Valley, and north into Forth and Mersey Rivers.Glaciers were in a number of locations on the west coast - at Mount Murchison, Mount Tyndall and the
Eldon Range . Glaciers flowed into theHenty River and King River. Moraines were deposited at Crotty and the Henty Road. Ice pushed out from the King River Glacier into Linda, Comstock and Nelson Valleys. Wood from the Linda moraine had acarbon-14 age of 26480 years . There are alsocirque s on Frenchmans Cap, the West Coast Range, the Denison Range, and King William Range.K. D. Corbett, A. V. Brown: [http://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/mrtdoc/dominfo/download/ERSK55_5/ERSK55_5.pdf "Geological Survey Explanatory Report Geological Atlas 1:250,000 series sheet SK55/5 Queenstown"] 1976]Several
cave s have developed in dolomite and limestone. Well known are King Solomons Cave and Marakoopa Cave atMole Creek , and the Newdgate Cave at Hastings.Periglacial activity broke up rocks withice wedge s and formedblock field s and block streams.Gravels are also left from rivers in Quaternary times. These include the
Huon River with gravel atRandals Bay ,Judbury and Beaupre Point. The pebbles are mostly quartzite, but include dolerite andagate .The film
Walking with Dinosaurs was filmed in part in central Tasmania where forests ofgymnosperm s similar to vegetation in the Cretaceous still grow.outh Tasman Rise
A ridge of continental crust extends south of Tasmania below sea level. It contains quartz syenite from Ma|1119|error=9, and tertiary volcanics.
Macquarie Island
Macquarie Island is politically part of Tasmania, but comes from a very different geological context. It has formed as part of theoceanic crust and mantle was buckled upwards. It is the only place in the world where a complete section of oceanic crust is exposed above water in the place it was formed. The rock composing the island was formed at the ridge along the boundary of theAustralian Plate and thePacific Plate inEocene times Ma|12|9. Spreading from the ridge became less perpendicular (ESE-WNW), more oblique (SE-NW) and eventually almost parallel to the ridge (NNE-SSW). Theplate boundary is now entirely atransform fault a few kilometers to the west of the island. This left fracture zones and spreading fabric in the rock. TheGeomagnetic reversals leave amagnetic anomaly trace in the rock. Transpression on the plate boundary has deformed the oceanic crust in the vicinity to make the Macquarie Ridge Complex, raising Macquarie Island out of the water. It is studied to understandseafloor spreading and transform faults, andhydrothermal alteration of the undersea floor. Most of the south of the island consists of sub oceanic basalt layered betweenGlobigerina ooze. The part north of Langdon Point and Ballast Bay consists ofserpentinite derived fromgabbro ,troctolite , andperidotite (dunite ,wehrlite , andharzburgite ). This was formed in the deep crust and mantle.The two different rock zones are separated by the Finch-Langdon fault zone. It consists of seven segments of faults, subsidiary faults and splays. The fault is a transform fault with a corner at the spreading ridge. South of the fault on the west coast is breccia interbedded with the basalts. The breccia matrix is mud, and the stones consist of basalt, dolerite, and gabbro. The southern end of Bauer Bay has a talus of breccia 140 m thick. On top is
greywacke andchert . Many other faults cut the rock due to stress from the transform, and uplift. Some of these have scarps that dam lakes.Karah L. Wertz et al:"Macquarie Island’s Finch-Langdon fault: A ridge-transform inside corner structure" in "Frontier Research on Earth Evolution", volume 1]Plate tectonics
Various theories describe the past history of Tasmania in relation to other continental masses. Most models have the south west Tasmania abbutting East Antarctica. In the missing link model, Z. X. Li has south west China positioned off the east coast of Tasmania with rifting at Ma|825|780, with the Kamding dykes in China matching some granites from Tasmania. Z. X. Li et al: [http://www.bdewaele.be/pdfs/Lietal_IGCP440_map_2008.pdf "Assembly, configuration, and break-up history of Rodinia: A synthesis" ] in Precambrian Research 160 (2008) pages 179–210]
Tasmania can be subdivided into two terranes, separated by the Tamar Fracture System, on a line from the Tamar River to Sorell in the south east. The West Tasmania Terrane constitutes most of the state, including all the Precambrian and Cambrian rocks. The East Tasmania Terrane makes up the north east and east coasts dating from the Ordovician.
Geohazards
The east side of the island of Tasmania is in a low earthquake area. The western highlands is part of a belt of seismic activity that includes highlands in eastern Victoria and New South Wales. Just off the north east coast is a point with a large number of tremors, believed to be an incipient volcano. [M Sandiford: "Neotectonics of southeastern Australia: linking the Quaternary faulting record with seismicity and in situ stress" Geological Society of Australia Special Publication 22, page 101–113] Macquarie Island is in a earthquake region. On December 23, 2004 an earthquake measuring 8.1 on the
Richter magnitude scale (one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded) rocked the island, but caused little damage. [Cite news |url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200412/s1272000.htm |title=Antarctic expeditioners unscathed by earthquake |work=News Online |publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation |date=2004-12-24 |accessdate=2007-04-05] .The last major earthquake in Tasmania was between magnitude 6.5 and 7 at the Lake Edgar Fault in the Recent Period, but more than 200 years ago.
On
4 June 1872 a large landslip collapsed part of the side of Mount Arthur. A huge debris flow descended Humphrys Rivulet, stripping the upstream parts of trees and regolith. Where Glenorchy is now, a flood 600 meters wide engulfed farms. Broken trees, boulders, and mud were deposited. Remarkably no one lost their life as all escaped to safety when hearing the rumbling in the distance. [C. Mazengarb, G. J. Dickens & C. R. Calver: [http://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/mrtdoc/dominfo/download/UR2007_01/UR2007_01.pdf "A compilation of historical accounts of the 1872 Glenorchy landslide"] Tasmanian Geological Survey Record 2007/01]Minerals
Several unusual minerals are known from Tasmania:
crocoite ,stichtite ,ferroaxinite from Dundas,sellaite ,chondrodite ,norbergite ,wagnerite andfluoborite from Mount Bischoff,heazlewoodite (Originally discovered in Tasmania) andshandite from the Trial Harbour nickel mine. From Mount Lyell there are rare minerals:mawsonite ,betechtinite ,florenceite ,hessite ,jalpaite ,magnesiofoitite ,svanbergite -woodhousite ,stannoidite ,stromeyerite , andzunyite .Tasmanite the mineral named after Tasmania is in Dana's classification as an Oxygenated hydrocarbon. It consists of reddish brown scales about 1 mm across. It is insoluble inbenzene ,carbon disulfide ,turpentine , ether or alcohol. It contains about 5% sulfur. It is found on the banks of the Mersey River. The shale it is present in, is a kind ofoil shale . [W. E. Ford: "Dana's Textbook of Mineralogy" John Wiley and sons 1932 page 776.]Pelionite is a name for
cannel coal fromMount Pelion East andBarn Bluff . This term is no longer used. [Letchworth George: "Descriptive List of the New Minerals 1892-1938" p 176]William Frederick Petterd was an amateur who studied minerals in Tasmania. He built up the Petterd collection which was donated to theRoyal Society of Tasmania and stored at theTasmanian Museum and Art Gallery . He discovereddundasite , named from the mine where it was found. Dundaisite has formula PbAl2(CO3)2(OH)4.H2O. It is a silky milk white spherical aggregate.Philipsbornite , PbAl3(AsO4)2(OH)5.H2O was originally found in the Adelaide mine and identified as a new mineral by Professor Walenta. It was named after another German professor Philipsborn. It occurs as several other mines and appears as a greenish grey earth.Shandite , Ni3Pb2S2 , was first discovered at Trial Harbour by P. Ramdohr in 1960. [Steve Sorrell: "Turning Red Lead Into Gold: The story of crocoite and other lead minerals of Tasmania" 1999]Geophysics
The
geothermal gradient was measured at a gas seep in Smithton as 26.4 degrees/km. Forest has 27.8 °/km. The Otway Basin has a gradient of 36°/km. [P. W. Baillie: [http://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/mrtdoc/dominfo/download/UR1999_06/UR1999_06.pdf "Investigations into gas of possible geothermal origin at Smithton"] 1999] Several companies are exploring for hot rocks forgeothermal energy . [cite web
url=http://www.news.com.au/mercury/story/0,22884,22430592-3462,00.html
title='Hot rock' miners win dig rights
work=Mercury
author=ALISON RIBBON
date=September 17, 2007
accessdate=2008-09-10] [cite web
url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/01/07/2133372.htm
title=Hot rocks hot property in Tasmania
work=ABC News
date=January 7, 2008
publisher=www.abc.net.au
accessdate=2008-09-10] The granite areas have a gradient of 30°/km, whereas the Parmeener sedimentary areas have a gradient of 40°/km. Heat flow is between 85 and 159 mw/m2.Active seismic exploration reveals the nature of the deep crust. It shows that the Tyennan block plumbs the depth to the
moho which is about 33 km underneath. The Tyennan Block slopes below the Adamsfield-Jubilee Element. Under the Tasmania Basin the block is stretched, with faults in to several large blocks that have tilted down. Above these the Adamsfield-Jubilee Element sediments have filled in the topography. Below the north east element the moho is 36 km deep with alternating seismically fast and slow rocks in the mid crust.The Tyennan Block and the Rocky Cape Element have a boundary that dips at 30D to the east to the base of the crust. The Dundas Element lies on top of this boundary.Barry J Drummond et al: "Evidence for crustal extension and inversion in eastern Tasmania,Australia, during the Neoproterozoic and Early Palaeozoic" Tectonophysics volume 329 page 1 to 21, 2000] A shallower Moho occurs under the Rocky Cape Block at 26 to 28km. A deep segment is found under the central north of the state, down to 34 km. Bass Strait is a low seismic velocity zone.Magnetic field measurements show that the different elements making up Tasmania have very different signatures. Wherever there is Jurassic Dolerite, the magnetic map shows fine ripples, so the Tasmania Basin stands out, as does the smaller intrusions in the other elements. The North east element is smooth, as is the Tyennan Block, and the Adamsfield-Jubilee Element. The Dundas Element has a smooth background with prominent north-south ridges. The Rocky Cape Element is densely packed with linear textures parallel to the Arthur Lineament, with the Smithton Syncline showing as a Y shape. King Island also shows north-south texture. Basalt south of Wynyard also shows a wrinkly magnetic signature.
The stress field in the crust has not yet been measured.
Mining
World class mineral deposits of base and precious metals were found in western Tasmania. Major mines are at Mount Lyell, Rosebery,
Zeehan ,Que River ,Henty and Savage River. Many are hosted in the Mount Read Volcanics. They are in the form of massive sulfides. The Mount Lyell mine extracts copper and gold. TheRenison Bell mine was the largest primary tin producer in Australia. Mount Lyell gold and copper deposit was discovered in 1883, formerly the biggest copper mine, and operating till this day.The Savage River ore body is in the Bowry Formation in the Arthur Metamorphic Complex. It consists of
magnetite ,pyrite ,chalcopyrite and tiny amounts ofsphalerite ,ilmenite andrutile . The ore was formed under the sea in association with volcanism. The Savage River area also contains deposits ofMagnesite in the form of marble.At Beaconsfield
gold is mined from a quartz reef in a fault. The largest Tasmaniangold nugget was found at Rocky River in 1883, weighing 243 ounces.An oil exploration boom happened in the 1920s with two companies making bold claims, but earning nothing from
oil shale .Asbestos was mined from the Cape Sorell and Serpentine Hill ultramafic complexes.History
Abel Janszoon Tasman noted in his journal on22 November 1642 that his compasses were not steady and deduced the presence of mines ofloadstone . This was two days before his lookout spotted Tasmania for the first time. This was the first prognostication of mineral wealth on the west coast of Tasmania.A. W. Humphrey, a mineralogist, collected rocks and minerals from 1804. W. H. Twelvetrees and
W. F. Petterd did petrographic investigations in Cygnet, around 1899.R. S. Bottrill: [http://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/mrtdoc/dominfo/download/UR2001_08/UR2001_08.pdf "A mineralogical field guide for a Western Tasmania minerals and museums tour"] 2001] Other unpaid people studied Tasmanian geology such asPaweł Edmund Strzelecki , Joseph Milligan who was a surgeon,Charles Darwin ,John Lhotsky andJoseph Jukes .Joseph Milligan sent specimens of a manganese mineral from
Frenchman's Cap andGalena to the 1851Great Exhibition in London. Small amounts of gold were discovered at Fingal and Lefroy in 1851.William B. Clarke a geologist and Anglican parson predicted that gold would be found in Tasmania at 146 degrees east longitude line. In17 July 1859 Charles Gould a geologist recruited from England was appointed as the Geological Surveyor of Tasmania by the Tasmanian governor. He began the search for worthwhile minerals in the west, gave up and studied the geology of the eastern half of the state instead. He was commissioned by theTasmanian Government in 1862 to return to the west coast, he named mountains in theWest Coast Range :Mount Lyell afterCharles Lyell , Mount Darwin, Mount Huxley and opponents ofCharles Darwin were commemorated with Mount Owen, Mount Sedgwick, and Mount Jukes. Gould returned several times but did not find worthwhile mineral deposits. James "Philosopher" Smith discovered theMount Bischoff tin deposit, the world's largest, on4 December 1871. This discovery inspired Renison Bell to find more tin, and Dally found the gold reef at Beaconsfield and at Lefroy.Geoffrey Blainey: "The Peaks of Lyell " Melbourne University Press 1967]In 1882 Gustav Thureau was appointed Inspector of Mines, later called Inspector and Mining Geologist. In 1889 the position became Geological Surveyor.
William Harper Twelvetrees took up the position. He established the Geological Survey library, and mineral and rock collection at the Queen Victoria Museum in Launceston. In 1883 the Mines Office was created from the Commissioners and registrars for mines and goldfields that worked in the Mines Branch of the Lands and Works Department. Bernard Shaw was appointed the Secretary for Mines. The Mines Office gained a Minister for Mines in 1894 and changed its name to Mines Department. Bernard Shaw later became the Police Commissioner. The Mines Department lost its separate existence in July 1989 when it was merged to the Department of Resources and Energy, which has since changed its name several times. The current name for the Mines Office is "Mineral Resources Tasmania".C. A. Bacon: [http://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/mrtdoc/dominfo/download/UR2001_03/Ur2001_03.pdf "A Brief History of the Department of Mines - 1882 to 2000"] 2001]Tannatt William Edgeworth David a geologist working out of Sydney was a proponent of the idea of Permo-Carboniferous glaciations. He studied the evidence for past glaciations in Tasmania. [David Branagan: "An early view of Permo-Carboniferous glaciation and its implications, from Australia (1906)" in Episodes, Vol. 28, no. 3 2005]Professor
S. Warren Carey established the Department of Geology at theUniversity of Tasmania in27 October 1946. He was an early proponent of continental drift and the unauthodoxexpanding earth theory . He had become the Government Geologist of Tasmania in 1944 where he organised the understanding of Paleozoic formations in the west coast mineral fields, and introduced the Cenozoic rift valley idea, and the policy of publishing the results of the Geologic Survey. Carey introduced terms such asorocline andsphenochasm and the concept of the hotspot. The University of Tasmania building for Geology and Geography was constructed in 1962. It had exhibitions of aFoucault pendulum , aseismometer recording drum, a mosaic illustrating crystal symmetry, and a large terrestrial globe. Carey organised and hosted the Continental Drift Symposium in 1956.The Tasmanian Seismic Net was established in 1957.
Professor Carey founded the Tasmanian Caverneering Club.
References
Maps
* Geological Map of Tasmania 1:506,880 Geological Survey of Tasmania-Department of Mines 1961
* Geological Atlas 1:250,000 series SK55-3 Burnie Geological Survey of Tasmania-Department of Mines 1973
* Geological Atlas 1:250,000 series SK55-4 Launceston Geological Survey of Tasmania-Department of Mines 1975
* Geological Atlas 1:250,000 series SK55-5 Queenstown Geological Survey of Tasmania-Department of Mines 1975
* Geological Atlas 1:250,000 series SK55-6 Oatlands Geological Survey of Tasmania-Department of Mines 1975
* Geological Atlas 1:250,000 series SK55-7 Port Davey Geological Survey of Tasmania-Department of Mines 1976
* Geological Atlas 1:250,000 series SK55-8 Hobart Geological Survey of Tasmania-Department of Mines 1975
* [http://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/portal/page?_pageid=35,832426&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL Mineral Resources Tasmania: Online maps]External links
* [http://www.mrt.tas.gov.au/portal/page?_pageid=35,832332&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL Mineral Resources Tasmania]
* [http://www.ga.gov.au/map/web3d/tasgo/#intro Geoscience Australia - Tasmanian TASGO 3D model]
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