Narooma Terrane

The Narooma Accretionary Complex or Narooma Terrane is a geological structural region on the south coast of New South Wales, Australia that is the remains of a subduction zone or an oceanic terrane. It can be found on the surface around Narooma, Batemans Bay and down south into Victoria near Mallacoota. It has attached itself to the Lachlan Fold Belt and has been considered as either an exotic terrane or as a part of the fold belt. Rocks are turbidites, block in matrix mélange, chert, and volcanics. The accretionary complex itself could either be the toe of a subduction zone, or an accretionary prism.[1] It was moved by the Pacific Plate westwards for about 2500 km until it encountered the east coast of Gondwana.[2] It is part of the Mallacoota Zone according to Willman,[3] which in turn is part of the Eastern Lachlan Fold Belt, which is part of the Benambra Terrane.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Underplating was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Ian G. Percival and Richard A. Glen: Early Ordovician geography of East Gondwana February 2003
  3. ^ C. E. Willman,* A. H. M. Vandenberg and V. J. Morand Evolution of the southeastern Lachlan Fold Belt in Victoria Australian Journal of Earth Sciences (2002) 49, 271–289