of New Zealand stratigraphy. Cenozoic deformation has been removed for clarity.
Tākaka Terrane The Tākaka Terrane contains a vast variety of different sedimentary and igneous rocks and ranges in age from the Cambrian to Devonian. In the West Coast region it outcrops in the north within the
Kahurangi National Park. This terrane contains New Zealand's oldest rocks.
Buller Terrane The Buller Terrane is composed of Ordovician to Devonian greywacke which has locally been metamorphosed to gneiss. The terrane is composed of the Golden Bay, Greenland and Reefton groups. The Greenland Group has been metamorphosed to form the Pecksniff Metasedimentary Gneiss. The common name for these is the 'Charleston Gneiss' and it was thought for most of the 20th century that these were the oldest rocks in the country. The Buller Terrane, particularly the Greenland Group is the most common basement unit west of the Alpine Fault on the West Coast.
Median tectonic zone |alt= This is series of typically arc related Carboniferous to early Cretaceous plutones that intrude both the eastern and western provinces and are concentrated along the boundary of the two. Along the West Coast the various intrusions include the Karamea Granite and the Rahu, Separation Point and Darran suites. These intrusions have two distinct age ranges,
Late Devonian to
Carboniferous and
Early Cretaceous. == Basement terranes east of the Alpine Fault==