Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/68600
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Type: Journal article
Title: Is Australia a tectonically stable continent? Analysis of a myth and suggested morphological evidence of tectonism
Author: Twidale, C.
Citation: Progress in Physical Geography: an international review of geographical work in the natural and environmental sciences, 2011; 35(4):493-515
Publisher: Arnold
Issue Date: 2011
ISSN: 0309-1333
1477-0296
Statement of
Responsibility: 
C. R. Twidale
Abstract: Occasional references to the relative tectonic instability of the Australian continent have been published over the last hundred years or so. Youthful tectonic forms were described from various parts of the continent throughout that period. Despite this, it was repeatedly claimed that the shield lands in particular were tectonically stable, and as recently as this century reference has been made to a concept embracing a tectonically inert continent. However, some 60 years ago, the accumulated evidence convinced E.S. Hills that in Australia all land surfaces, including the shield lands, and even recent alluvial plains, were tectonically disturbed. This conclusion was reinforced by analyses of seismicity and faulting; by regional geological mapping that revealed widely distributed tectonic forms and especially fault-related features, many of them of neotectonic age; by technological advances that allow faulting episodes to be closely dated; by the recognition of underprinting; and by the realization that many minor forms, previously unrecognized or attributed to other mechanisms or processes, are associated with crustal stress and are of tectonic origin. Thus, while Australia is a relatively stable continent, it is subject to widespread small-magnitude earth movements. Ironically, in view of earlier thinking, neotectonic forms may be better developed and preserved on the shields than elsewhere.
Keywords: A-tent
Australia
crustal stress
neotectonic
sheet structure
shield
stability
tectonic
Rights: © The Author(s) 2011
DOI: 10.1177/0309133311402715
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309133311402715
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest
Earth and Environmental Sciences publications

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