Accepted Manuscript: Gondwana Research
Accepted Manuscript: Gondwana Research
Accepted Manuscript: Gondwana Research
PII: S1342-937X(18)30268-5
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2018.09.008
Reference: GR 2041
To appear in: Gondwana Research
Received date: 13 April 2018
Revised date: 24 September 2018
Accepted date: 25 September 2018
Please cite this article as: Sebastian Zimmermann, Robert Hall , Provenance of Cretaceous
sandstones in the Banda Arc and their tectonic significance. Gr (2018), https://doi.org/
10.1016/j.gr.2018.09.008
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1iCRAG @ School of Earth Sciences, University College Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland.
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2SE Asia Research Group, Department of Earth Sciences, Royal Holloway University of
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London, Egham, Surrey, TW20 0EX, UK. NU
* Corresponding author ([email protected])
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Zircon geochronology #
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ABSTRACT
differs from west to east. Sandstones in Sumba and West Timor contain significant
sandstones are quartz rich, and suggest a recycled origin and/or continental affinity.
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Heavy mineral assemblages in Sumba and West Timor indicate metamorphic and
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minor acidic igneous sources and include a mixture of rounded and angular zircon
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and tourmaline grains. In East Timor, Babar and Tanimbar, an ultimate origin from a
but variations in age populations indicate local differences in source areas. Sumba
and West Timor are characterised by zircon age peaks at 80-100 Ma, 200-240 Ma,
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550 Ma, 1.2 Ga, 1.5 Ga and 1.8 Ma. East Timor and Tanimbar contain 80-100 Ma,
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160-200 Ma, 240-280 Ma, 550 Ma and 1.5 Ga zircon peaks. Most populations are
also common in Triassic and Jurassic formations along the Outer Banda Arc and in
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many other areas of SE Asia. However, the abundance of Jurassic and Cretaceous
Cretaceous (68-140 Ma) sources are suggested to include the Schwaner Mountains
in SW Borneo and Sumba. Material derived mainly from older recycled sediments
that had their main sources in the Bird’s Head, Western and Central Australia, and
1. Introduction
and volcanic arcs, as a result of subduction-related processes in the region, that now
Hutchison, 1989; Bowin et al., 1980; Hall, 1996, 2011, 2012; Packham, 1996;
Charlton, 2001; Hinschberger et al., 2005). Since the Palaeozoic, rifting led to
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separation of fragments from the Gondwana margin, that were later successively
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accreted to Sundaland at different times (Fig. 1) (Audley-Charles et al., 1988; Hall,
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2012; Barber and Crow, 2009; Metcalfe, 2011, 2013).
During the Mesozoic, large rivers drained the Australian continent and
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filled the major offshore basins of the NW Shelf, within a fluvial to marginal marine
setting (Bishop, 1999; Barber et al., 2003), creating important offshore hydrocarbon
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reservoirs. The southern Outer Banda Arc islands of Sumba, Timor, Babar and
heavy minerals and detrital zircon geochronology, Triassic and Jurassic sandstones
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were interpreted to contain detritus derived from Western and Central Australia, but
also an important component previously not recognised, from the Bird’s Head region
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(Fig. 3), and some material from local Jurassic volcanism within the Inner Banda
has been described by various researchers (e.g. von Rad et al., 1982; Longley et al.,
2002; Heine and Müller, 2005; Hall et al., 2009; Hall, 2012; Heine et al., 2012;
Gibbons et al., 2012). Tectonic blocks rifted from areas between the Exmouth
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Plateau in the west and the Arafura Sea in the east, where separation of the
continental blocks formed the Banda embayment north of Australia (Hall, 2002,
2012; Charlton, 2012; Spakman and Hall, 2010), and left the Sula Spur (Klompé,
1954) northeast of Australia. The clastic sediments deposited in the Outer Banda Arc
islands before the Late Jurassic rifting were discussed by Zimmermann and Hall
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northwards and were accreted to the Sundaland (Fig. 1) margin (e.g. Audley-
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Charles, 1968; Hamilton, 1979; Wensink, 1994; Wakita et al., 1996; Parkinson et al.,
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1998; Abdullah et al., 2000; Harris, 2006; Hall et al., 2009; Metcalfe, 2011; Hall,
2012) and clastic sediments were deposited on this continental crust during their
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northward movement and after their arrival in SE Asia. During Australia–SE Asia
collision, since the Early Miocene, slices of the SE Asian margin were thrust back
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onto the Australian continental margin and are now found in the Outer Banda Arc
islands.
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after separation of blocks from the Gondwana margin in the Late Jurassic and before
their Neogene thrusting onto the Australian margin in the Outer Banda Arc islands.
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Details are still not completely understood and are partly the subject of on-going
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research. We present petrology, heavy mineral analyses and U–Pb ages of detrital
identify the origin and possible sources of detrital material and to consider previously
Sundaland in the Cretaceous to form what is now much of Borneo, East Java and
West Sulawesi. Three principal blocks have been identified (Hall et al., 2009;
Metcalfe, 2009; Hall, 2012): the Banda, Argo and Inner Banda blocks, which rifted to
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The Banda block was the first to be accreted to the Sundaland margin
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and is now identified with SW Borneo. For many years SW Borneo was interpreted
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as a fragment of Asian/Cathaysian origin (e.g. Hutchison, 1989; Metcalfe, 1988,
1990, 1996). The area of the Schwaner Mountains and further south was described
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as the ‘Basement Complex’, ‘Continental Core’ or ‘Sunda Shield’ (van Bemmelen,
(e.g. van Bemmelen, 1949; Haile, 1974; Tate, 1991; Tate and Hon, 1991) were
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includes Cretaceous and Jurassic granites in the Schwaner Mountains (Haile et al.,
1977; Davies et al., 2014) and the metamorphic rocks are now known to be
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Cretaceous (Davies et al., 2014). Recent work in Sarawak has identified the
boundary of Triassic Sundaland and suggests the Banda/SW Borneo block arrived in
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which can be traced from SW to NE from West Java to the Meratus Mountains of SE
from other continental fragments added to the Sundaland margin later in the
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Cretaceous. In the suture zone in Java and SE Borneo are ophiolitic, arc rocks and
and Java (Katili, 1971, 1973; Sukamto, 1975a,b; Sikumbang, 1986, 1990; Schiller et
al., 1991; Wakita et al., 1994a,b, 1998; Parkinson et al., 1998; Wakita, 2000;
Clements et al., 2009) include rocks formed by oceanic spreading, arc volcanism,
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oceanic and forearc sedimentation, and subduction-related metamorphism. K-Ar
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ages from metamorphic rocks summarised by Parkinson et al. (1998) indicate high
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pressure-low temperature metamorphism between 117 and 124 Ma, and radiolaria
associated with pillow lavas in Java are Early Cretaceous (Wakita et al., 1994b).
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Based on evidence from SE Borneo, Sikumbang (1986, 1990) and Wakita et al.
1996; Parkinson et al., 1998; Sribudiyani et al., 2003; van Leeuwen et al., 2007;
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origin. The identification of different blocks in Java, SE Borneo and Sulawesi and
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interpretation of their former position on the Australian margin are based largely on
The Argo block forms the area that now includes much of East Java
and West Sulawesi. Studies in East Java show that the southern part of the island is
underlain by continental crust (Smyth et al., 2007) and suggest that there is similar
crust beneath the Java Sea and in the forearc south of East Java (Deighton et al.,
2011; Granath et al., 2011; Nugraha and Hall, 2012). Inherited zircons in Cenozoic
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sedimentary and igneous rocks of East Java range in age from Archean to Cenozoic.
The distribution of zircons reveals two different sources. Clastic rocks in north and
west parts of East Java contain Cretaceous zircons, which probably came from the
Mountains volcanic arc of East Java includes abundant acid volcanic and intrusive
rocks which contain only Archaean to Cambrian zircons. These indicate deep
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continental Gondwana crust below East Java which originated close to western
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Australia (Smyth et al., 2007, 2008). Australian-origin continental crust is also
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considered to underlie parts of the southern Makassar Straits and East Java Sea
suggest there is similar crust beneath the Java Sea south of Pulau Laut in SE
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Borneo (Emmet et al., 2009; Granath et al., 2011) and south of East Java (Deighton
Initial reconstructions (Hall et al., 2009; Hall, 2012) of the rifted blocks
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suggested that the Argo block included all of present-day East Java–West Sulawesi.
Hennig et al. (2016) have since shown that zircon age data from NW Sulawesi
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indicate that the underlying continental crust originated in a position east of the Argo
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block, and formed part of an Inner Banda block. There are other indications that a
single Argo block may be an over-simplification of the deep continental crust east of
the Meratus suture, but reconstruction is difficult because basement rocks are limited
to small areas and mainly overlain by Cenozoic rocks. Jurassic ammonites and
bivalves reported from South Sulawesi (Sukamto et al., 1990; Sukamto and
in western Sulawesi there is evidence from inherited zircons, and from chemical
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(Priadi et al., 1993, 1994; Bergman et al., 1996; Polvé et al., 1997, 2001; Elburg and
Foden, 1999; Elburg et al., 2003). There are blueschists and other high pressure-low
temperature metamorphic rocks known from inliers in the Bantimala and Barru areas
in South Sulawesi (Sukamto and Supriatna, 1982; Miyazaki et al., 1996, 1998;
Parkinson et al., 1998; Maulana et al., 2010, 2013) suggesting sutures between
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continental blocks. Neogene potassic volcanics in SW Sulawesi do not show the
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Australian continental isotopic signatures shown by similar volcanic rocks further
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north in Sulawesi (Elburg et al., 2003) which may indicate an underlying suture. All
the supposed suture rocks are very far east of the Meratus suture and cannot be
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connected to it; they could indicate the Argo block is actually made up of multiple
within which were zones of exhumed mantle and deep marine sediments.
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The character of the deep crust remains uncertain because there are
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palaeomagnetic studies suggest that Sumba formed part of the Sundaland margin by
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the Late Cretaceous (Wensink, 1994; Abdullah et al., 2000) but the character of the
deep crust is unknown. 3He/4He ratios suggest that Australian continental crust was
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involved in genesis of magmas throughout the inner Banda arc from the Banda
Ridges to Flores (Hilton et al., 1992). Similar isotope geochemical studies could help
identify if the deep crust beneath Sumba is ancient continental or of younger arc
origin.
After the arrival of the Argo and Inner Banda blocks, subduction
ceased around the Sundaland margin at c.90 Ma. Thus, the outer part of the SE
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4). Subsequently, there was a short-lived episode of subduction between the latest
Cretaceous and Eocene. Extension in the Eocene formed the Makassar Straits,
although the amount of extension in the South Makassar Straits was small (e.g.
Situmorang, 1982; Johansen, 2007; Kupecz et al., 2013; Armandita et al., 2015), and
there has been major extension of the eastern part of the region which includes
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Sulawesi and Sumba during Banda rollback from the Middle Miocene (Rigg and Hall,
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2012; Camplin and Hall, 2014; Nugraha and Hall, 2018).
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3. Stratigraphic background NU
Fig. 2 shows a simplified stratigraphy of the Cretaceous siliciclastic
3.1 Sumba
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Formation (Fig. 5) in Sumba were described by Burrolet and Salle (1982) and von
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der Borch et al. (1983). Cretaceous ages were determined by fossil fragments,
bivalves, molluscs and gastropods (Exogyra sp., Mytilidae sp., Parainoceramus sp.,
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Platyceramus sp. and Actaeonella sp.) (von der Borch, 1983). Abdullah et al. (2000)
Rocks collected in Sumba during this study were assigned to the Upper
Cretaceous Lasipu Formation. Localities sampled are divided into the central, south-
central, western and eastern regions. This newly proposed subdivision highlights
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sediments: the key differences are massive highly indurated metamorphosed rocks,
with the absence of mudstone in the north, thick siltstone beds interbedded with thin
with intercalated sandstone beds in the south and east. A sedimentary log in Fig. 5
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Konda beach in south central Sumba, locally with channel structures (Fig. 5B) and
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layers up to 10-centimetre-thick of medium to coarse-grained sandstone (Fig. 5C).
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13 samples from various locations in Sumba were analysed petrologically, 9 for
heavy minerals and 7 for zircon geochronology. SUM 06 contains recrystallised Late
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Cretaceous foraminifera (Globotruncana sp.) from a shallow inner neritic
3.2 Timor
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exotic fragments, that were described as tectonically distributed over the island
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have been discussed by many researchers and termed the Banda Allochthon (e.g.
Audley-Charles & Harris, 1990; Harris, 1991; Audley-Charles, 2011) and commonly
1979; Norvick, 1979; Brown and Earle, 1983; Audley-Charles, 1986; Harris, 1989;
sandstones have been assigned to the evenly bedded and finely laminated Seical
Formation (ET 17). The Seical Formation was not previously recognised at the
sampling location, and sandstones there had been interpreted to be Triassic as they
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resemble rocks of the Babulu Formation in West Timor (Audley-Charles (1968).
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However, the samples collected contain Late Albian‐Early Cenomanian foraminifera
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(Hedbergella sp., Favusella washitensis, Favusella sp.) from a shallow inner neritic
3.3 Babar
Cretaceous rocks had been reported from Babar. However, in central Babar there is
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thick bedding (sample BAB 25). No fossils have been found. The hard and dense
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seen in Sumba and, like the Lasipu Formation, lithologies were associated with
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igneous intrusions. As discussed later, detrital zircon ages proved the maximum
3.4 Tanimbar
(Fig. 6A) that are tectonically separated from the main island to the south-southeast
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(Kaye, 1989; Charlton et al., 1991). Cretaceous sandstones were assigned to the
Ungar Formation and divided informally into two members (Charlton et al., 1991).
We recognise the same sandstone members, but include a third intermediate red
shale member, which contains radiolarian cherts dated by Jasin and Haile (1996) as
member was informally named the Arumit Member (Charlton, pers. comm., 1996, in
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Jasin and Haile, 1996). The Ungar Formation members are: (1) Lower Sandstone
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Member, (2) Arumit Member, and (3) Upper Sandstone Member. Neither of the
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sandstone members has previously been dated. Palynomorphs indicate the Lower
Sandstone Member is Upper Jurassic (Zimmermann and Hall, 2016). The Upper
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Sandstone Member must be Early Cretaceous or younger, based on the work of
throughout the islands (Fig. 6B). It consists of well‐bedded thin red siltstone‐
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mudstone interbeds that dip steeply to the southwest (Fig. 6C and Fig. 6D). Four
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distinctive chert horizons were recognised within the member and are highlighted in
the sedimentary log in Fig. 7. Cherts are between 7 and 15 cm thick and yield
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radiolaria that were dated by Jasin and Haile (1996). Two horizons were identified as
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Barremian) age. The contact of the Arumit Member with the Upper Sandstone
Member is indicated in Fig. 6C, which is characterised by mud lenses and imbricated
brown. INPEX (pers. comm., 2012) provided comprehensive information for some
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nanoplankton, palynomorphs and radiolaria). The rocks collected for this research
were correlated with these previously dated (Upper Jurassic - Lower Cretaceous)
samples. 8 samples from various islets were analysed petrologically, 5 for heavy
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4. Methodology
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4.1 Petrology
Point counting of at least 300 grains of quartz, feldspar and lithic rock
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fragments (>0.0625 mm) by standard methods (Galehouse, 1971) was used to
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acquire light mineral modes, shown on ternary plots for each unit (Dickinson and
Suczek, 1979; Dickinson et al., 1983). The fields in the diagrams for QFL (Quartz-
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sorting and roundness of grains. Sorting categories are (1) poorly sorted, (2)
moderately sorted, (3) well sorted and (4) very well sorted. Rounding categories are
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Mange and Maurer (1992). Samples collected were crushed, decarbonated in 10%
acetic acid, sieved and washed (meshes of 0.063mm and 0.250mm) and separated
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equivalent lithium polytungstate (LST), which have densities between 2.82–2.95 g/ml
using an optical polarising microscope (NIKON Eclipse Lv 100) and additional SEM
analyses were performed to confirm selected grains. The ribbon count method used
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Common heavy minerals were grouped by their most likely protoliths,
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based on suggested source rock associations (Feo-Codecido, 1956; Mange, 2002;
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Nichols, 2009). Zircon, tourmaline, anatase, monazite, topaz and xenotime are
cassiterite, allanite and vesuvianite are present, either in very low percentages or
can be assigned to more than one group. Apatite is a very common mineral and
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abundant in all samples of this study (up to 50%). Since it can be found in different
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groups (acid igneous, granite pegmatite, contact metamorphic and basic igneous), it
is treated separately.
attached) and tourmaline (brown: rounded, euhedral; blue: rounded, euhedral; green:
all shapes) were performed during counting. Three types of grain shapes were
grouped into an ‘euhedral’ group; 2) rounded and subrounded zircons were grouped
into a ‘rounded’ group; 3) grains with matrix attached represent the third group.
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Geochronology, using detrital zircons, is a powerful method to assess
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provenance and correlate sedimentary units (e.g. Goldstein et al., 1997; Cawood et
al., 1999, 2003; Fedo et al., 2003; Gehrels et al., 2006; Sevastjanova et al., 2010;
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Schoene, 2014). The maximum depositional age (MDA) of sedimentary rocks can be
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determined (Dickinson and Gehrels, 2009) and geochronology is a valuable tool to
2004).
the following parameters: spot sizes of the ablation pits: 20-35μm; pulse repetition: 8-
10Hz; dwell time: 25s; warm-up: 10-15s; wash-out: 18s. The ablated material was
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carried in helium gas into the plasma. A quadrupole mass spectrometer (Agilent
Technologies 7700 Series ICP-MS) was used. Standards that were used were the
Plešovice zircon (337.13±0.37 Ma) by Sláma et al. (2008) and a reference glass
987 selected zircons (Sumba 321, West Timor 133, East Timor 141,
Tanimbar 392) were chosen to investigate the relationship of grain shapes and the
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analysed ages. The aim was to distinguish optically between rounded grains with
recycled histories and euhedral grains, which could have formed close to the time of
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5. Results
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5.1 Light Minerals: Textures and petrography
samples are dominated by quartz, with varying abundances of feldspar and lithic
analysed. Grains are angular to subrounded (2-3) and moderately to very well-sorted
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and feldspar (14-26%). However, samples show slight variations of the modal
composition between the different areas (Fig. 8). Central and western Sumba are
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characterised by high volcanic quartz and K-feldspar contents, while south central
the QFL diagram and a strong magmatic arc origin on the QmFLt diagram (Fig. 8).
Textures contain high rounding and sorting values, which plot across the mature
field.
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to well sorted. Compositions are dominated by quartz (50-66%), with varying content
of feldspar (16-27%) and lithic fragments (18-23%). Quartz types are dominated by
8, samples plot in the recycled orogen field on the QFL diagram and within the
dissected magmatic arc on the QmFLt diagram. On the textures plot, samples
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scatter across the immature to mature field boundary (Fig.8).
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East Timor sandstones contain well sorted (3) sub-angular to rounded
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(2-4) grains. Marked predominance of quartz (80-89%) is characteristic (Fig. 8).
There are also feldspars (5-11%) and lithic fragments (6-9%). The QFL and QmFLt
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diagrams indicate a ‘quartzose recycled orogen’ modal composition.
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Formation in Tanimbar are quartz-rich (77-97%) arenites (Fig. 8). Grains are
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commonly sub-rounded to rounded (3-4) and moderately to very well sorted (2-4).
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Lithic fragments (max. 9%) and feldspar (max. 14%) are insignificant. Modal
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recycled’ (QmFLt) fields. Rounding and sorting indicate a texturally mature polycyclic
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(39-82%) that reflects the abundance of mainly garnet and andalusite (Fig. 9).
Sandstones contain on average 14% acid igneous and 2% basic igneous grains.
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The West Timor sandstone contains a metamorphic (38%) and acidic
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igneous (29%) signal indicated by chlorite and zircon (Fig. 9). Zircon grains are a
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mixture of rounded (48%), euhedral (25%) and attached to matrix (27%).
(33%) mainly based on rutile and andalusite (Fig. 9). Zircon grains are mainly
rounded (~65%) and tourmalines are dominated by euhedral grain shapes (~74%).
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stable heavy minerals. The strong metamorphic signal (Fig. 9) is based on chlorite
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(mainly zircon and tourmaline). 32% metamorphic sources are mainly based on
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rutile, andalusite and garnet. Morphologies of zircons are dominantly euhedral (42-
66%) and rounded (34-54%). Tourmalines on average are 57% euhedral and 43%
rounded.
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The numerical ages assigned here to periods, epochs and stages are
based on Gradstein et al. (2012). Data tables of LA-ICP-MS analyses are provided in
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Histograms of detrital zircon ages and according grain morphologies of Cretaceous
sandstones in the Banda Arc show generally a mixture of different age populations
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(Fig. 10), with similar proportions of Precambrian to Phanerozoic grains.
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In Sumba 583 concordant LA‐ICP‐MS U‐Pb detrital zircon ages were
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obtained from samples SUM 1, SUM 6, SUM 10, SUM 21, SUM 22, SUM 24 and
SUM 30. The youngest zircon ages (71.9±1 Ma in SUM 6 to 84.7±1.6 Ma in SUM 10)
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(mean age of three youngest overlapping zircon ages 69.3 Ma). Samples contain
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zircons with 48.5% Phanerozoic, 47.9% Proterozoic and 3.6% Archean ages. Most
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(19.9%) and Mesoproterozoic (14.9%). The main peaks are at 80-100, 230, 550,
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1200 and 1600 Ma. Zircon grain morphologies of Cretaceous grains are dominated
the Oe Baat Formation which has a Tithonian to Berriasian age (Charlton, 1987;
Sawyer et al., 1993). It contains 132 concordant zircon ages. However, the sample
contains 16 Cretaceous grains and the youngest zircon age (75.5±1.4 Ma) indicates
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a Campanian (Late Cretaceous) MDA, which means that it cannot be part of the Oe
Baat Formation. This shows the value of the detrital zircon ages which indicate that a
3.8% Archean ages. There are no Jurassic grains. The most abundant age
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Mesoproterozoic (15.9%). The main peaks are at 85, 220‐240, 550 and 1600 Ma
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(Fig. 10A). Zircon grains with Cretaceous ages are dominated by euhedral and
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subhedral grains. Paleozoic zircons show a mix of subrounded/rounded and
assigned, but, there are clearly Cretaceous or younger sandstones in southern West
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Timor. Sample SZ 37 was collected in the Kolbano area and also mapped as the Oe
contains a single Cretaceous zircon, with one Permian grain, and abundant
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pers. comm., 2015). The belemnites must therefore be reworked. The Eocene rocks
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in Kolbano were all previously assumed to be carbonates only and clearly need
zircon age (97.3±1.3 Ma) constrains the MDA to the Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian).
Archean ages. The most abundant age populations are Cambrian to Carboniferous
(10.4%) The main peaks are at 95, 170, 260, 280 and 550 Ma (Fig. 10A). There is no
1800 Ma peak. It is striking that most zircons have subhedral and euhedral grain
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mentioned earlier, sandstones are unfossiliferous and undated. The youngest zircon
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(104.7±1Ma) in sample BAB 25 from Babar indicates an Early Cretaceous (Albian)
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MDA. Sample BAB 25 yielded only 17 concordant analyses and the ages must be
interpreted with care as some populations are likely to have been missed but the
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ages are comparable to populations in Cretaceous sandstones from Tanimbar and
East Timor (Fig. 10A). The sample consists of 70.6% Phanerozoic, 23.5%
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Proterozoic and 5.9% Archean ages. Most abundant ages are Permo‐Triassic
samples TAN 11 (MDA 84.6±1 Ma), TAN 28 (MDA 83.7±1 Ma), TAN 31 (89.5±1 Ma)
and TAN 45 (103.6±2 Ma). The youngest zircon ages within this group indicate an
54.3% Phanerozoic, 43.8% Proterozoic and 1.9% Archean ages. The most abundant
populations are also present. The main peaks are at 100, 150‐170, 240‐280, 550,
1200 and 1800 Ma (Fig. 10A). It is striking that most zircons show subhedral and
euhedral grain morphologies for Mesozoic and Paleozoic populations (Fig. 10B).
6. Discussion
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Quartz‐rich sandstones from Sumba, West Timor, East Timor, Babar
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and Tanimbar vary in light and heavy mineral compositions, which generally indicate
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mixed sources (Fig. 8). Slight differences in the modal compositions and textural
analyses suggest derivation from a magmatic arc for Sumba and West Timor
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(immature to mature character with a mix of euhedral and rounded grains) and a
recycled orogen for East Timor and Tanimbar, where morphologies are
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predominantly rounded.
metamorphic minerals (mainly garnet and andalusite) in Sumba and West Timor
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(Fig. 9). In contrast, East Timor and Tanimbar contain high abundances of rounded
zircon and tourmaline which supports the multiply recycled sedimentary character of
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resemble each other (Fig. 10). All islands contain Cretaceous zircons that are
the time of deposition. The general distribution of age populations and corresponding
(1.2 Ga) and Neoproterozoic (500‐650 Ma) peaks, but in TET the 1.8 Ga population
is significantly lower. The most striking feature in TET is the abundance of Jurassic
zircons that are missing in SWT and in Jurassic sandstones, such as the Lower
and Hall, 2016). The 550 Ma peak is present in all Cretaceous samples, but missing
in most Triassic and Jurassic formations. The Cretaceous sandstone from Babar
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yielded only 17 concordant grains, including 2 Cretaceous ages. Lithologically it
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resembles the Sumba Lasipu Formation, but the small number of zircons includes a
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Jurassic grain, and this sample therefore resembles East Timor and Tanimbar
sandstones more closely rather than those from Sumba and West Timor.
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Furthermore, there are abundant Permian‐Triassic and Cambrian to Carboniferous
populations in TET, but grains of this age are of minor significance in SWT (Fig. 10
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Fig. 12 shows zircon age histograms for SE Asian units that contain
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(Davies et al., 2014) and Central Sulawesi, including inherited ages from
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Cretaceous deposits that remained in Australia, such as well samples from the
Exmouth Plateau and Caswell Plateau (Southgate et al., 2011; Lewis and Sircombe,
(Zimmermann and Hall, 2016), together with studies along the Australian NW Shelf
(Southgate et al., 2011; Lewis and Sircombe, 2013) (Fig. 12), the Bird’s Head
(Gunawan et al., 2012) and Central Sulawesi (Hennig et al., 2016) are a useful guide
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to linking sandstones to likely sources in Western Australia, Central Australia and the
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Bird’s Head region (Fig. 13).
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6.1.2 Post- Breakup sources
the Late Jurassic (Fig. 3). Collision of these allochthonous fragments in the
Cretaceous added the Argo, Banda and Inner Banda Blocks to the Sundaland
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margin (Fig. 4). After their arrival, the siliciclastic sediments deposited had sources in
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SE Asia including igneous rocks and reworked older crust. Australian material
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(igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary) that had been transported with the
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fragments and included inherited Precambrian zircons from continental crust with a
west Australian origin (e.g. beneath East Java), as reported by Smyth et al. (2007,
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2008) and Hall et al. (2009). Jurassic volcanic activity was suggested by
Zimmermann and Hall (2016), based on zircons in West Timor sandstones, with a
source along the NW Shelf of Australia within the southern Banda Block–Inner
Banda Block (Hennig et al., 2016). Volcanic activity was driven by the break-up of
blocks.
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The most common Cretaceous age peaks in this study are different in
SWT and TET; they are c. 90-80 Ma in Sumba and West Timor (SWT), and c. 110-
90 Ma (minor 130 Ma) in East Timor, Babar and Tanimbar (TET). Gunawan et al.
(2012) interpreted Late Cretaceous ages from the Sirga Formation (c. 88 Ma) in the
Bird's Head as most likely to have been derived from a local source. Abundant
granites of Cretaceous age in the Borneo Schwaner Mountains (Banda Block) were
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interpreted as having been derived from pulses of magmatic activity around 112, 98,
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84 and 76 Ma (Davies et al., 2014). Common populations in the granitoids are 120‐
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100 Ma and 90‐80 Ma. In contrast, Cretaceous granodiorite intrusions from Sumba
are younger and were dated at 86-77 Ma and 71-56 Ma (Abdullah et al., 2000).
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Fig. 13 shows a map that is based on previous studies in greater
Australia and SE Asia, highlighting the islands investigated and possible main
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regions (i.e. granitoid bodies, cratons and fragments) that could have supplied
Ma) and granodiorite intrusions from Sumba (younger than c. 86 Ma) are the most
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However, older zircons must have come from other places since pre-Cretaceous
zircons are absent in the north Schwaner Mountains, although a few Jurassic
granites are known form the south Schwaner Mountains, and pre-Cretaceous rocks
are not known from Sumba. Significant Archean, Neo and Meso‐Proterozoic
sandstones in the Banda Arc (Fig. 11) and the Australian NW Shelf (Fig. 12). These
were mainly derived from Western and North/Central Australia and the Bird’s Head.
populations in TET and SWT. Cretaceous zircons are missing in the autochthonous
Australian units and support a SE Asian setting for the Banda Arc Cretaceous
sandstones that form part of the Banda Allochthon (BA) or Banda Terrane (Audley-
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Charles, 2011) for the individual islands: BA West Timor, BA East Timor, BA Babar
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and BA Tanimbar.
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In order to estimate the possible contribution of different sources, a
cumulative percentage plot in Fig. 14A highlights relative abundances of ages and
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probable sources. TET contains abundant Jurassic zircons that are missing in SWT
and in Jurassic sediments within the Argo Block (e.g. origin of the Lower Sandstone
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Member of the Ungar Formation in Fig. 11). Hence, a geographical separation with
different provenance is necessary (Fig. 14B). The ultimate Jurassic source was
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transport directions (Fig. 14B) shows suggested sources for Cretaceous formations
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in the Banda Arc that are now part of the Banda Allochthon, including West Timor
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(BA-WT), East Timor (BA-ET), Babar (BA-B), and Tanimbar (BA-T). The heavy
mineral and zircon age data suggest a syn-sedimentary Cretaceous source in the
Lewis and Sircombe, 2013), Java (Smyth et al., 2003, 2007), Borneo (Davies et al.,
2014) and Sulawesi (Hennig et al., 2016) were included (Fig. 14A) to highlight age
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sources for the Banda Allochthon sandstones are a mix of Cretaceous populations
derived from Sundaland (Schwaner Mountains) and zircons derived from pre-
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contemporaneous first cycle Cretaceous grains and a Permian‐Triassic signal.
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Rounded Proterozoic (Australian) grains are also mixed with subhedral grains
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indicating differences in recycling of Australian cratons.
Head region (16%) (Fig. 14A). 57% of Cretaceous zircons have ages less than c. 86
MA
Ma, indicating a relationship to the Sumba granodiorites and/or the later eruptive
stages of the Schwaner Mountains. Based on previous research (Sallé, 1982; von
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der Borch et al., 1983) and new field observations the rocks are interpreted as
E
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turbidites deposited in deep water. The variation in rocks in the central part of the
island and around the south and southwest coast suggest facies changes along the
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shelf and slope. West Timor (BA-WT) contains similar population percentages as
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Borneo/Sumba (12%) and the Bird’s Head (19%) (Fig. 14A). 31% of the Cretaceous
population are younger than 86 Ma indicating input from Sumba granodiorites and/or
Head (31%), North/Central Australia (17%), the Banda Block (10%) and Borneo
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(7%), of which >100 Ma old zircons dominate (80%), indicating a probable source in
the Schwaner Mountains, whereas younger (<86 Ma) Sumba ages are absent.
deriving from Western Australia (31%), the Bird’s Head (28%), North/Central
Australia (23%), the Banda Block (8%) and Borneo (10%) (Fig. 14A). The
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likely source in the Schwaner Mountains with very minor possible contribution from
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Sumba. Thus, we suggest that sediment was transported to the site of deposition
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mainly from the west but also from the east (Fig. 14B).
grains provides a representative sample. However, the few ages do suggest possible
provenance trends. The main features are similarities to Cretaceous samples from
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East Timor and Tanimbar, suggesting the geographical location of the BA-B
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fragment was where it is now, between BA-ET and BA-T (Fig. 14B).
PT
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et al., 2009; Hall, 2012; Metcalfe, 2013) proposed models with fragments derived
Jurassic reconstructions by Zimmermann and Hall (2016). Fig. 15A displays the
rifting of fragments (Argo, Banda and Inner Banda) from the Early Cretaceous (130
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
Ma) and the situation within the Sundaland margin in the Late Cretaceous (75 Ma).
The figures show the drift history to the north and collision with Sundaland with
75 Ma. Sumba and BA-WT (SWT) are situated at the southern edge of Sundaland
and were supplied by sediment from the north (Borneo) and east by local erosion of
the Argo Block. BA-ET, BA-B and BA-T (TET) were situated at the eastern margin.
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Sediment was mainly derived from the east (Borneo and West Sulawesi) and from
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the north (reworking of the southern edge of the inner Banda Block).
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Interpreted Cenozoic movements to the present-day locations of
different fragments are shown in Fig. 15B. At around 23 Ma, the most northerly part
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of Australia (Sula Spur) collided with Sundaland, followed by subduction hinge
rollback into the Banda Embayment (Spakman and Hall, 2010) and initial
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collision of the Banda volcanic arc with the Australian continent and the resulting
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(Gondwanan) sediments and basement, coupled with rapid uplift that created the
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7. Conclusions
Permian-Triassic and Jurassic sandstones in Central and Western Australia and the
Bird’s Head, depositing the pre-breakup sequence. From the Late Jurassic, rifting of
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the Australian Gondwana margin caused fragmentation and separation into blocks
contents of volcanic quartz, feldspar and lithic fragments, indicating mixed sources
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for the fragments that later became Sumba, BA-West Timor, BA-East Timor, BA-
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Babar and BA-Tanimbar. The principal source rocks are suggested to be of
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metamorphic origin in Sumba and West Timor (SWT), and acidic igneous and
Sundaland. Variations between the SWT and TET fragments suggest differences in
MA
provenance, most likely due to geographical separation along the southern shelf of
Neogene collision processes moved these fragments into the Outer Banda Arc
E
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Islands, where they are overthrust and now re-incorporated in the Australia margin.
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Acknowledgements
BP, ENI, GDF Suez, Inpex, Murphy, Niko, Repsol, Shell and Statoil. Great thanks for
assistance during fieldwork to Afif Saputra (Inpex), Institut Teknologi Bandung (ITB)
and the State Ministry of Research and Technology (RISTEK). We thank Martin
Rittner and Andy Beard (UCL/Birkbeck College) for help and support at the LA-ICP-
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
MS and CL facility and Anna Bird and Dominique Tanner for help with heavy
minerals and SEM work at Royal Holloway. Also, many thanks to Marcelle
grateful for access to unpublished material from the Tanimbar Islands that was
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Figure Captions
Fig. 1: Simplified map of SE Asia showing the Banda Arc Islands and blocks that
rifted from Gondwana and were added by accretion to Sundaland (modified from Hall
and Sevastjanova, 2012).
Fig. 2: The Banda Arc Islands discussed in this paper: Sumba, Timor, Babar and
Tanimbar, showing key features of the stratigraphy of each island and the Mesozoic
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formations (Fm=Formation) that were analysed, with sample locations. Deep marine
samples are highlighted in yellow and shallow marine samples in blue.
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Fig. 3: Pre-breakup reconstruction in the Triassic showing the principal blocks rifted
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in the Jurassic with interpreted major sediment transport directions and suggested
sources (from Zimmermann and Hall, 2016). Dark coloured areas are potential
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sources of zircon age populations.
accretion of continental blocks rifted from the Banda embayment, based on Smyth et
al. (2007), Hall et al. (2009), Hall (2012), and Hennig et al. (2016). The Banda block
is present-day SW Borneo, the Argo block includes East Java and parts of West
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Sulawesi, and the Inner Banda block includes NW Sulawesi, and parts of NE
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Borneo.
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coarse-grained sandstone.
Fig. 6: A) Simplified geological map of the Tanimbar Islands, based on data collected
in the field and structural interpretations modified from Kaye (1989); B) Panoramic
view of the Arumit Member on Ungar Island; C) Well-bedded interbedded siltstones
and mudstones; D) Contact of red shales of the Arumit Member with the Upper
Sandstone Member.
Fig. 7: Sedimentary log of the Arumit Member of the Ungar Formation, showing
details of the succession on Ungar Island and its interpreted relationship to the
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Lower and Upper Sandstone Members. Chert layers are highlighted in red and
radiolarian ages are based on Jasin and Haile (1996).
Fig. 8: Summary of light mineral point counting of Cretaceous sandstones from the
various islands. Ternary plots after Dickinson et al. (1983) showing possible
provenance affiliation (Q – Quartz, F – Feldspar, L – Lithic fragments, Qm –
Monocrystalline quartz, Lt – Total lithic fragments). Textures show assessments of
sorting and rounding using simple number schemes which were used to estimate
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maturity.
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varietal morphology of Cretaceous sandstones from the various islands.
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Fig. 10: Histograms showing grouped zircon ages for Cretaceous formations from
islands in the Banda Arc with possible sources. Bin width on the left (0-500 Ma) is 10
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Ma, on the right (500-4000 Ma) is 50 Ma. Total numbers of zircons for each group
are highlighted (red indicates the greater numbers, green the smaller). Percentages
of Precambrian zircon grains that are older than 541 Ma are indicated; B) Bar charts
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for samples grouped according to age showing zircon morphology types for different
age groups (Cr = Cretaceous, J = Jurassic, P/T = Permian-Triassic, C/C =
Cambrian–Carboniferous, Neo = Neoproterozoic, Meso = Mesoproterozoic, Paleo =
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Fig. 11: Kernel density estimation plots of Cretaceous formations from this study
compared to Triassic and Jurassic formations from Zimmermann and Hall (2016).
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Fig. 12: Histograms summarizing the main features of zircon ages for the Schwaner
Mountains of Borneo, Central Sulawesi and offshore Australia with colour bands
marking likely sources. Bin width on the left (0-500 Ma) is 10 Ma, on the right (500-
4000 Ma) is 50 Ma. Total numbers of zircons for each group are highlighted (red
indicates the greater numbers, green the smaller). Percentages of Precambrian
zircon grains that are older than 541 Ma are indicated.
Fig. 13: Map showing possible source areas in Australia and SE Asia with ages that
resemble age populations found in the Banda Arc Islands and the NW Shelf of
Australia (modified from Zimmermann and Hall, 2016).
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sources in the Schwaner Mountains and Sulawesi, with additional proximal sources
in Sumba and other parts of the outer Sundaland margin, with recycling of Permian-
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Triassic and Jurassic pre-rift units (purple and blue).
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Fig. 15: A) Tectonic reconstructions for SE Asia (based on Hall, 2012) with focus on
the rifting Argo and Banda terranes from the Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous; B)
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Tectonic reconstructions of the Banda Allochthon (BA) at 23 Ma showing the initial
collision between the Sula Spur and Sundaland; at 15 Ma showing subduction hinge
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rollback and early stage of fragmentation of the Sula Spur; at 5 Ma showing location
of allochthonous fragments before Timor arc-continent collision; and present-day
configuration highlighting the outer Banda Arc Islands with overthrust fragments.
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Research highlights:
margin.
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Neogene collision reincorporated sandstones of Banda Allochthon in Australian
margin.
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