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Deformation and possible origins of the Cooma Complex,southeastern Lachlan Fold Belt,New South Wales
Authors:S E Johnson
Institution:Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences , Macquarie University , Sydney, NSW, 2109, Australia E-mail: sjohnson@laurel.ocs.mq.edu.au
Abstract:The western half of the Cooma Complex, New South Wales, consists of three thrust‐bound blocks that contain the same structural fabrics, but with different orientations and intensities, owing largely to heterogeneous strain late in the deformation history. Correlation of these fabrics with those found regionally outside the complex shows that a well‐developed, gently dipping crenulation cleavage (S4) apparently has no regional counterpart. This cleavage may have formed by vertical shortening that was restricted to the complex and its development may have been assisted by the higher temperatures there. The Cooma Complex is one of five metamorphic complexes in what is known as the Eastern Metamorphic Belt, which stretches several hundred kilometres through the southeastern Lachlan Fold Belt. The complexes may have formed as local hot spots, possibly related to underplating of mafic magma or intrusion of hot tonalites at or near the base of the Ordovician metasediments (or both). Whether or not these complexes are exhumed portions of an extensive layer in the mid‐crust of the fold belt can be tested by evaluating Late Ordovician/Early Silurian thermal gradients in the ubiquitous Ordovician metasediments.
Keywords:Cooma Complex  deformation (structural geology)  Lachlan Fold Belt  metamorphic complex  structural analysis  thrust faults
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