Tectonic geomorphology of Australia

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Created 14/01/2025

Updated 14/01/2025

The Australian continent is actively deforming in response to far-field stresses generated by plate boundary interactions and buoyancy forces associated with mantle dynamics. On the largest scale (several 103 km), the submergence of the northern continental shelf is driven by dynamic topography caused by mantle downwelling along the Indo-Pacific subduction system and accentuated by a regionally elevated geoid. The emergence of the southern shelf is attributed to the progressive movement of Australia away from a dynamic topography low. On the intermediate scale (several 102 km), low-amplitude (c. 100–200 m) long-wavelength (c. 100–300 km) topographic undulations are driven by (1) anomalous, smaller-scale upper mantle convection, and/or (2) lithospheric-scale buckling associated with plate boundary tectonic forcing. On the smallest scale (101 km), fault-related deformation driven by partitioning of far-field stresses has modified surface topography at rates of up to c. 170 m Ma-1, generated more than 30–50% of the contemporary topographic relief between some of Australia’s highlands and adjacent piedmonts, and exerted a first-order control on long-term (104–106 a) bedrock erosion. Although Australia is often regarded as tectonically and geomorphologically quiescent, Neogene to Recent tectonically induced landscape evolution has occurred across the continent, with geomorphological expressions ranging from mild to dramatic.

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Title Tectonic geomorphology of Australia
Language eng
Licence notspecified
Landing Page https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/dec9a9ce-709d-4f8a-a0ce-4560c5e63f7c
Contact Point
Geoscience Australia
clientservices@ga.gov.au
Reference Period 11/04/2018
Geospatial Coverage http://www.ga.gov.au/place-names/PlaceDetails.jsp?submit1=GA1
Data Portal data.gov.au