A new fold structure in the Woolomin beds suggesting a sinistral movement on the peel fault
- 1 December 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of the Geological Society of Australia
- Vol. 23 (4) , 401-406
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00167617608728954
Abstract
A previously unrecognized fold structure some 10 by 25 km, consisting of a steeply southward‐plunging syncline and anticline, has been mapped in the Woolomin Beds north of Woodsreef, New South Wales. This is an F2 structure which may be interpreted as a drag fold formed as a result of sinistral motion along the Peel Fault about the time of the Carboniferous‐Permian boundary. Prior to this, earlier isoclinal folding with a bedding‐plane cleavage is thought to have been associated with the overthrusting of the Woolomin Beds over the sediments of the Tamworth Trough to the west.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- A cordierite-bearing granite suite from the New England Batholith, N.S.W., AustraliaContributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, 1975
- Tasman Geosyncline greenstones and ophiolitesJournal of the Geological Society of Australia, 1975
- Plate Tectonic Interpretation of the Paleozoic History of the New England Fold BeltGSA Bulletin, 1975
- The geological development of the southern part of the New England Fold BeltJournal of the Geological Society of Australia, 1974
- A plate tectonic model of the Palaeozoic tectonic history of New South WalesJournal of the Geological Society of Australia, 1973
- Volcanic greywackes from the upper Devonian Baldwin formation, Tamworth‐Barraba district, New South WalesJournal of the Geological Society of Australia, 1968
- Some potassium‐argon ages in New England, New South WalesJournal of the Geological Society of Australia, 1963
- WRENCH-FAULT TECTONICSGSA Bulletin, 1956
- Stress-environment in the genesis of chrysotile, with special reference to the occurrence at Woodsreef, near Barraba, New South WalesEconomic Geology, 1952