Now on ScienceBlogs: The death of Tetrapod Zoology

Enter to Win

Highly Allochthonous

News and Commentary From the Wide World of Earth Science

Search

The Authors

You're not missing much Chris Rowan is a geologist specialising in the dark arts of paleomagnetism, and getting people to pay him to travel to exotic destinations for fieldwork. Having drilled up New Zealand during his PhD, and South Africa in his first post-doc, he now works at the University of Edinburgh.

Chris on Twitter


A girl, a pack, a forest, a river Anne Jefferson has a love of all things water-related and blends hydrology, geomorphology, geology, and climate change in her work. She has a Ph.D. from Oregon State University and is now an assistant professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

Anne on Twitter


What the heck does 'Highly Allochthonous' mean?
Blog Facebook Page
Ye olde blog

Geoblogosphere latest


Geotweetage


Recent Comments

Recent Posts

Blogs I read

Categories

Archives

Sb/DonorsChoose Drive


Thanks!

« Lusi in Time | Main | Sometimes you just have to plot the data yourself »

635 days later

Category: academic lifegeology
Posted on: March 19, 2008 6:25 AM, by Chris Rowan

It seems a long time since I first submitted my grand opus on the recent tectonic evolution of New Zealand to the Journal of Geophysical Research. 21 months, some crushing reviews, and a major rewrite later, it is finally being presented to the world:

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 113, B03103, doi:10.1029/2006JB004594, 2008

Widespread remagnetizations and a new view of Neogene tectonic rotations within the Australia-Pacific plate boundary zone, New Zealand

Christopher J. Rowan and Andrew P. Roberts

Abstract

Large, clockwise, vertical axis tectonic rotations of the Hikurangi margin, East Coast, New Zealand, have been inferred over both geological and contemporary timescales, from paleomagnetic and geodetic data, respectively. Previous interpretations of paleomagnetic data have laterally divided the margin into independently rotating domains; this is not a feature of the short-term velocity field, and it is also difficult to reconcile with the large-scale boundary forces driving the rotation. New paleomagnetic results, rigorously constrained by field tests, demonstrate that late diagenetic growth of the iron sulfide greigite has remagnetized up to 65% of sampled localities on the Hikurangi margin. When these remagnetizations are accounted for, similar rates, magnitudes, and timings of tectonic rotation can be inferred for the entire Hikurangi margin south of the Raukumara Peninsula in the last 7-10 Ma*. Numerous large (50-80°) declination anomalies from magnetizations acquired in the late Miocene require much greater rates of rotation (8-14° Ma-1) than the presently observed rate of 3-4° Ma-1, which is only likely to be characteristic of the tectonic regime established since 1-2 Ma. These new results are consistent with both long- and short-term deformation on the Hikurangi margin being driven by realignment of the subducting Pacific plate, with collision of the Hikurangi Plateau in the late Miocene potentially being key to both the initiation of tectonic rotations and the widespread remagnetization of Neogene sediments. However, accommodating faster, more coherent rotation of the Hikurangi margin in Neogene reconstructions of the New Zealand plate boundary region, particularly in the late Miocene, remains a challenge.

Received 23 June 2006; accepted 14 September 2007; published 19 March 2008.

I'll probably write more about this in the next couple of weeks - both the research itself, and my experience of getting it through peer review - but right now, I'm just savouring the fact that I can now stop having to add "which will hopefully get published soon" to any sentence where I talk about my PhD research.

*Ma = million years.

Share this: Stumbleupon Reddit Email + More

Comments

1

Oh, congratulations! If I thought I would understand it, I'd read it properly. For now all I can say is that the 11 figures are very pretty.

Posted by: Bob O'H | March 19, 2008 7:27 AM

2

nice work ... congrats ... it must feel good!

Posted by: BrianR | March 19, 2008 10:11 AM

3

Congratulations!

Posted by: Ole | March 19, 2008 10:38 AM

4

SWEET!, congratulations! I can only imagine the pressure that is off of your back:)

Posted by: Ken Clark | March 19, 2008 10:57 AM

5

Well done! I'll look forward to your future posts on this.

Posted by: chezjake | March 19, 2008 11:12 AM

6

Awesome job chris! You should have done a paper a midocean ridges so we could BPR3 it on Deep Sea News though. Maybe next time eh?

Posted by: kevin z | March 19, 2008 11:17 AM

7

Yay! Congratulations!

Posted by: Kim | March 19, 2008 11:49 AM

8

Hoorah!

Posted by: Maria Brumm | March 19, 2008 12:29 PM

9

Woo! Congratulations!

Posted by: Julian | March 19, 2008 2:21 PM

10

I suppose you should be happy that it only took 21 Mo. not 21 Ma. to get published.

Congratulations!

Posted by: Propter Doc | March 19, 2008 3:22 PM

11

Thanks everyone :-)

Kev - I'm just finishing up a paper on magnetic mineral diagenesis in marine sediments, so you never know...

Posted by: Chris Rowan | March 20, 2008 6:08 AM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. On some blogs, comments are moderated for spam, so your comment may not appear immediately.)





ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Collective Imagination
Enter to win the daily giveaway
Advertisement
Collective Imagination

© 2006-2009 ScienceBlogs LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of ScienceBlogs LLC. All rights reserved.