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Aragonite mud, ooids and reefs: Neogene to Quaternary carbonate sedimentation on the North-West Shelf of Australia

Applicant Dr. Lars Reuning
Subject Area Palaeontology
Term from 2016 to 2022
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 320220579
 
The distally steepend carbonate ramp of the North West Shelf of Australia (NWS) equals in size the carbonate systems of the Bahamas or the Persian Gulf and forms an important template for the interpretation of ancient ramp systems. The NWS stretches between ~13° and 21°S and is situated at the transition between the tropical and sub-tropical realm. Carbonate sedimentation on this shelf is strongly controlled by regional oceanography, which is dominated by the south-flowing, warm, low-salinity Leeuwin Current and the Indonesian Throughflow. The sediment distribution on the sea-floor is well documented, but information on the Neogene to Pleistocene sedimentary section of the NWS was until recently limited to cuttings from industry wells and geophysical data. In 2015, IODP Expedition 356 cored the continental margin sequence of the southern and central part of the NWS to investigate its depositional history since the middle Miocene. Data collected during this expedition will allow for the first time to integrate core data with extensive 2D and 3D seismic-reflection surveys allowing regional and detailed geomorphological studies of the carbonate system from the tens-of-meters to basin scale. Within the project we will: 1) test if an aragonite rich lowstand wedge forms at the NWS, which would be reverse to the classical "highstand shedding" concept; 2) analyse the environmental conditions that led to the formation of several intervals rich in non-skeletal grains including the oldest Quaternary ooids from the Indo-Pacific region; 3) establish a seismic and sequence stratigraphic interpretation tied to core data to investigate the environmental controls for the development and drowning of the Miocene reef system on the NWS.
DFG Programme Infrastructure Priority Programmes
 
 

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