The timing of flood basalt volcanism associated with formation of the Ontong Java Plateau (OJP) is estimated from paleomagnetic and paleontologic data. Much of OJP formed rapidly in less than 3 million years during the early Aptian, at the beginning of the Cretaceous Normal Polarity Superchron. Crustal emplacement rates are inferred to have been several times those of the Deccan Traps. These estimates are consistent with an origin of the OJP by impingement at the base of the oceanic lithosphere by the head of a large mantle plume. Formation of the OJP may have led to a rise in sea level that induced global oceanic anoxia. Carbon dioxide emissions likely contributed to the mid-Cretaceous greenhouse climate but did not provoke major biologic extinctions.
S U M M A R Y Recent versions of the Australian apparent polar wander path (APWP) for the late Mesozoic and Tertiary show considerable variation. Re-examination of the Australian igneous data suggests that they are more reliable than assumed by some recent authors. The trajectory of the Australian APWP is defined by fitting the position of a set of poles including both igneous and laterite/overprint data. This allows the dated igneous poles to be used to determine age as a function of distance along the trajectory. Both the trajectory and the age are fitted by means of weighted least-squares regression, and are given approximate confidence limits.Age is best fitted in the Australian case as a linear function of distance along the APWP. This result contrasts with that of Idnurm, who suggested a variable rate of polar wander during the Tertiary. The new APWP is in better agreement with hot-spot data. Dating of New Caledonian laterites by the new APWP gives a result consistent with geological evidence, while dating by reference to Idnurm's path does not. Large non-dipole components or significant true polar wander are not needed to explain the Australian Tertiary APWP.
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