The geologic history of the Australian continental mass is extremely prolonged and involved, continuing from the
Archaean to the recent. In a gross pattern, continental Australia grew from west to east, with Archean rocks mostly in the west, Proterozoic rocks in the centre, and Phanerozoic rocks in the east. Recent geologic events are confined to intraplate earthquakes, as the continent of Australia sits distant from the plate boundary. The Australian continent evolved in five broad but distinct time periods, namely: 3800–2100
Ma, 2100–1300 Ma, 1300–600 Ma, 600–160 Ma and 160 Ma to the present. The first period saw the growth of nuclei about which cratonic elements grew, whereas the latter four periods involved the amalgamation and dispersal of
Nuna,
Rodinia and
Pangea, respectively.
Tectonic setting The Australian landmass has been part of all major
supercontinents, but its association with
Gondwana is especially notable as important correlations have been made geologically with the African continental mass and
Antarctica. Australia separated from Antarctica over a prolonged period beginning in the
Permian and continuing through to the
Cretaceous (84 Ma). Continental Australia is unique among the continents in that the measured stress field is not parallel to the present-day north-northeast directed plate motion. Most of the stress state in continental Australia is controlled by compression originating from the three main collision boundaries located in
New Zealand,
Indonesia and
New Guinea, and the
Himalaya (transmitted through the
Indian and
Capricorn plates). South of latitude −30°, the stress trajectories are oriented east–west to northwest–southeast. North of this latitude, the stress trajectories are closer to the present day plate motion, being oriented east-northeast–west-southwest to northeast–southwest. Notably, the main stress trajectories diverge most markedly from one another in north–central New South Wales (east-southeast to north-northeast), although the area is not known historically for earthquake activity. Young mountain building (< 5 Ma, the
Sprigg Orogeny) in the
Flinders Ranges of South Australia is driven from plate convergence at the boundary in
New Zealand. Australia is currently moving toward
Eurasia at the rate of 6–7 centimetres a year.
Archaean There are three main
cratonic shields of recognised Archaean age within the Australian landmass: The
Yilgarn, the
Pilbara and the
Gawler cratons. Several other Archaean-Proterozoic orogenic belts exist, usually sandwiched around the edges of these major cratonic shields. The history of the Archaean cratons is extremely complex and protracted. The cratons appear to have been assembled to form the greater Australian landmass in the late Archaean to
Mesoproterozoic, ~2400 Ma to 1,600 Ma. Chiefly the
Glenburgh Orogeny is partly responsible for the assembly of the West Australian landmass by joining the
Yilgarn and
Pilbara cratons. The Glenburgh Orogeny is exposed in the rocks of the Glenburgh terrane, the Yarlarweelor Gneiss Complex, and possibly the Glengarry, Yerrida and Padbury basins. Unknown Proterozoic orogenic belts, possibly similar to the Albany Complex in southern Western Australia and the
Musgrave Block, represent the Proterozoic link between the Yilgarn and Gawler cratons, covered by the Proterozoic-Palaeozoic
Officer and
Amadeus basins.
Palaeoproterozoic Western Australian events The assembly of the Archaean Yilgarn and Pilbara cratons of Australia was initiated at ~2200 Ma during the first phases of the
Glenburgh orogen. The last stages of the 2770–2300 Ma Hamersley Basin on the southern margin of the Pilbara Craton are Palaeoproterozoic and record the last stable submarine-fluviatile environments between the two cratons prior to the rifting, contraction and assembly of the intracratonic ~1800 Ma Ashburton and Blair basins, the 1600–1070 Ma Edmund and Collier basins, the 1840–1620 Ma northern
Gascoyne Complex, the 2000–1780 Ma Glenburgh terrane in the southern Gascoyne Complex and the Errabiddy Shear Zone at the northwestern margin of the Yilgarn craton. Between approximately 2000–1800 Ma, on the northern margin of the Yilgarn craton, the c. 2000 Ma Narracoota Volcanics of the
Bryah Basin formed in a transverse back-arc rift sag basin during collision. Culmination of the cratonic collision resulted in the foreland sedimentary
Padbury Basin. To the east the Yerrida and Eerarheedy Basins were passive margins along the Yilgarn's northern margin. The c. 1830 Ma Capricorn Orogeny in this section of the Pilbara-Yilgarn boundary resulted in deformation of the Bryah-Padbury Basin and the western fringe of the Yerrida Basin, along with flood basalts. The Yapungku Orogeny (~1790 Ma) formed the Stanley Fold Belt on the northern margin of the Eerarheedy Basin, via assembly of the Archaean-Proterozoic fold belts of Northern Australia.
East Australian events The Palaeoproterozoic in southeastern Australia is represented by the polydeformed high-grade gneiss terranes of the Willyama Supergroup, Olary Block and Broken Hill Block, in South Australia and New South Wales. The Palaeoproterozoic in the north of Australia is represented mostly by the
Mount Isa Block and complex fold-thrust belts. These rocks, aside from suffering intense deformation, record a period of widespread platform cover sedimentation, ensialic rift-sag sedimentation including widespread dolomite platform cover, and extensive phosphorite deposition in the deeper sea beds.
Mesoproterozoic The oldest rocks in
Tasmania formed in the
Mesoproterozoic on King Island and in the Tyennan Block. Late Mesoproterozoic igneous events include: • the
Giles Complex mafic-ultramafic intrusions in the Musgrave Block at ~1080 Ma • widespread sills in the
Bangemall Basin and the Glenayle area at ~1080 Ma • The Warukurna Large Igneous Province of ~1080 Ma
Neoproterozoic Widespread deposition occurred in the
Centralian Superbasin and
Adelaide Geosyncline (Adelaide Rift Complex) during the
Neoproterozoic. The
Petermann Orogeny caused extensive uplift, mountain building and basin fragmentation in central Australia at the close of the Neoproterozoic. ==Paleozoic==