Nature of the Cuvier Abyssal Plain crust, offshore NW Australia

2021 
Magnetic stripes have long been assumed to be indicative of oceanic crust. However, continental crust heavily intruded by magma can also record magnetic stripes. We re-evaluate the nature of the Cuvier Abyssal Plain (CAP), offshore NW Australia, which hosts magnetic stripes and has previously been defined as oceanic crust. We show chemical data from a basalt within the CAP, previously described as an enriched MORB, could equally be interpreted to contain evidence of contamination by continental material. We also recognise seaward-dipping reflector (SDR) sequences in seismic reflection data across the CAP. Borehole data from overlying sedimentary rocks suggests these SDRs were emplaced in a shallow-water ( 500 km further offshore NW Australia than currently thought; this would impact plate tectonic reconstructions, as well as heat flow and basin modelling studies. Our work also supports the growing consensus that magnetic stripes cannot, by themselves, be used to determine crustal affinity.
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