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Geological Society, London, Special Publications; 2003; v. 206; p. 77-91;
DOI: 10.1144/GSL.SP.2003.206.01.06
© 2003 Geological Society of London

Australia and Gondwanaland

Palaeomagnetic constraints on the Proterozoic tectonic evolution of Australia

Michael T. D. Wingate & David A. D. Evans

Tectonics Special Research Centre, Department of Geology and Geophysics, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia

mwingate{at}tsrc.uwa.edu.au

Recent plate tectonic models advocate assembly of Proterozoic Australia by tectonic processes that involved large-scale horizontal motions, whereas previous models suggested that the continent evolved as an essentially intact block of lithosphere. Geological and geochemical observations alone are insufficient to test whether the major cratonic blocks of Australia were together or widely separated during the Proterozoic; only palaeomagnetism can provide quantitative constraints on relative plate motions during the Precambrian. Despite deficiencies in the palaeomagnetic record for Proterozoic Australia, groups of overlapping palaeopoles for 1.7–1.8 and 1.5–1.6 Ga permit the North and West Australian cratonic assemblages to have occupied their present relative positions since at least c. 1.7Ga, and to have been joined to the South Australian cratonic assemblage since at least c. 1.5Ga. Nonetheless, additional geological, geochronological and palaeomagnetic data are required to test whether large oceans closed between any of the continental blocks.