Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 120

Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 120
118 N-America, on the basis of a permanent coastline, and this is then suggested for the Burma-Indonesia-Australia and New Zealand area. To this must in any case be added the question, which land furnished the sediments for the Her- cynian to Alpine chain from Burma to Australia? At the ends we have old India and Australia on the west side of the arcs, from which we eonclude that there was a now subsided land mass all the way in between. We have already seen in Chapter 4 that a 5000 km drift of India during the Tertiary is unacceptable for other reasons, and the same applies to Australia. In the present position of the land masses, the Hercynian trend rhymes, but we could hardly have ex- pected that after a Mesozoic and Tertiary more or less rotat- ing drift of India and Australia from Africa. Subsidence in the Indian Ocean during the Tertiary, most likely in the Oligocene regression, is just as possible as in the North Atlantic. We have assumed that a rapidly spreading nanocrystalline state is the basis for such subsidence, and the even thickness of shallow sea organic deposition shown by (35) refers also to the Indian Ocean. Asia furnished also sediments along a coast line from Borneo via Celebes, Japan to Kamchatka, as is easily understood. Concerning the coasts of Africa and eastern S-America, we have more limited geophysical knowledge of Mesozoic accu- mulations of sedimentary strips than in N-America. The mate- rial available now to the author will not be discussed. Con- cerning S-Africa, it is clear that continental Triassic and Jur- assic drop from a Jurassic peneplain, now at an altitude of 2400 m, to a depth of 1800 m below sea-level in Natal (87, p. 193) which is evidence, both of a great continental uplift, and of a subsidence east of Natal. Let us for a moment postulate, for the sake of argument, that 150 My ago, America began to drift away from Africa. Then, at opposite coasts of these continents there would, by not too unfavourable drainage conditions, be formed the coastal accumulations of Africa and America, first in a lane between
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