GES1004 & SSA2215 Week 2 Geology of Singapore
GES1004 & SSA2215 Week 2 Geology of Singapore
GES1004 & SSA2215 Week 2 Geology of Singapore
of
Singapore
Western
Eastern
Topographic belts
Eastern Belt
Andean-type
subduction
granites
285 - 230 M yr
Western Belt
Himalayan-type
collision granites
220 200 M yr
Central Belt
Andean-type
subduction
granites
230 220 M yr
Convergent Boundaries
Oceanic-Continental Boundaries
Cold + wet
crust
Singapore granite
Singapore granites
m
gen
Andean-Type Orogeny: oceanic + mantle melts = granites
with quartz + feldspar + biotite +/- hornblende
Convergent Boundaries
Continental - Continental Boundaries
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Normal
crust 35 km
thick
Eurasia
Crust
Mantle
(Red-beds)
2 x thickened lower crust melts: granite magma is less dense than solid crust, rises and
crystallises as granite plutons in the middle and upper crust:
Himalayan granites have quartz, feldspar, biotite + muscovite
Black biotite
White
feldspar
Andean-type
biotite granite
Himalayan-type
muscovite granite
Granite
- Felsic intrusive igneous rock
- Granular and phaneritic or crystalline
- Predominantly white, pink, or grey in colour, depending on their mineralogy.
Hornblende
Complex mineral, composed of calcium-ironmagnesium silicate, aluminium-iron-magnesium silicate and
iron-magnesium silicate.
Muscovite
Most common mineral of the mica family. The mica group
of sheet silicate (phyllosilicate) minerals.
Biotite
Black mica minerals.
Diorite
- Intrusive igneous rock
- Silicate minerals feldspar (typically andesine),
biotite, hornblende, and/or pyroxene.
- Intermediate between mafic gabbro and felsic
granite.
Gabbro
- Dark coarse-grained mafic intrusive igneous rocks
- Oceanic crust is mostly formed of gabbro
- Slowly cooled holocrystalline mass
JOHOR BATHOLITH
Granite
Diorite
Gabbro
Central Belt
Carboniferous
Eastern Belt
Mid Triassic
volcanics
Oliver (2011)
Murai
Slate
Little
Guilin
WESTERN BELT
Dairy Farm
Quarry
EASTERN BELT
KEY
Recent alluvium
and land-fill
Kent Ridge
Sentosa
North
Old Alluvium
St Johns Is
10 km scale
Jurong Formation
Gabbro
Little Guilin
Granite dyke
Gombak Gabbro
Fault
1 cm
White feldspar
Dark green pyroxene
Gabbro
inclusion
Granite
veins
White feldspar
Glassy quartz
Larger black hornblende
Smaller black biotite
i.e. Andean-type Granite
244 +/- 2 Ma
Gombak Gabbro
260+/-2, 254+/2,
249+/2, 246+/-2 Ma
Mandai Quarry
Granite 237
+/- 1 Ma
P. Ubin Ketam
Quarry Granite
230+/-6 Ma
P. Ubin Jetty
Diorite 95+/-1 Ma
Pulau Tekong
Punggol Pt
Little Guilin
Granite dyke
250+/-2 Ma
s
Dairy Farm
Granite
244+/-2Ma
Murai Slate
Pengerang
Volcanics
238+/-2Ma
KEY
Holocene Alluvium
and land-fill
Plio-Pleistocene
Old Alluvium
Upper Triassic Jurong Fm
Jurong Fm
detrital zircons
209+/-2 Ma to 2.7Ba
North
RESULTS OF
AGE DATING
10 km scale
Punggol Point
Boulders were quarried from Pengerang in nearby Johor
Pengerang
Quarries
Punggol
P. Tekong
volcanics
Oliver (2011)
<10 cm
P. Tekong
Andesitic volcanic ash
Middle
Triassic andesite
volcanoes
The granite intrusions are the magma
chambers for the volcanoes (same age)
Pengerang Volcano
238+/-2 Ma
25 km
Mandai Granite
237 +/22 Ma
Siam/Burma/Malaya/Sumatra = SIBUMASU
Petronas (1999)
290 Ma
210 Ma
Same
fauna
Exotic
fauna
SP
KL
SP
Suture
KL
Palaeomagnetics
3,500 km apart
Glacial marine
Aussi fauna
NC = North China
SC = South China
EM = Eastern Malaya (SP)
WB = West Borneo
S = Sibumasu incl Western Malaysia (KL)
WC = Western Cimmerian Continent
3,500 km wide
Glacials
Sibumasu
crust
Central Belt
Palaeo
Tethys
Vertical scale = 25 km
Horiz scale = 100 km
Lithosphere
Asthenosphere
Eastern Belt
Magmatic arc + tin mineralisation
Andean-type 264 Ma(3)
margin crust
Sibu 285-276 Ma(1)
Mantle
melts
Sibumasu (without any tin mineralisation) is drifting towards the Andean-type margin of
Eastern Malaysia like an ice berg drifts across the sea. A shallow dipping subduction
zone consumes the Palaeo Tethys Ocean and forms the tin-bearing magmatic arc in the
east of the Eastern Belt
Siam/Burma/Malaya/Sumatra = SIBUMASU
Andean-type
tin-granites
Singapore
gabbro + granites
260-230 Ma(1)
Subduction zone steepens as slab rolls back and magmatic arc moves westwards
to produce tin-mineralisation and magmatism in the Singapore area. Deep sea sediments are scraped off the down going slab to form an accretionary prism
Himalayan-type tin-granites
NeoTethys
219-198 Ma(3)
W. Belt
Tin-bearing lower
crustal melts?
Indosinian Orogeny
Jurong Fm
Central
Belt
Eastern Belt
Singapore
The subduction zone steepens further and magmatism occurs in the Central Belt.
The Palaeo Tethys Ocean is finally consumed and the Western Belt has collided
with the Central Belt forming the Bentong-Raub suture zone (BRS).
The lower crust of the Central Belt is melted and forms tin-bearing Himalayan-type
granite mountains in the upper crust of the Western Belt.
This is the Indosinian Orogeny.
The Jurong (red bed) Formation is deposited in Singapore as the mountains are eroded..
Granite
230+/-6Ma
s
Diorite
95+/-2Ma
Pulau Tekong
Andesite
238+/-4Ma
s
Granite
244+/2Ma
Gabbro
260+/-2 Ma
P. Sajahat
KEY
Jurong Formation
youngest = 209+/-2 Ma
North
Recent alluvium
and land-fill
Old Alluvium
Jurong Formation
10 km scale
Gabbro
Tanjong Renggam
Pulau Tekong
Pulau Sajahat
Tanjong Batu Koyok
X 45 magnification
Folded
Muddy inter-bed
Silty top
Turbidite
Graded bedding
Sharp sandy
base
Mud
Turbidites form
submarine fans
Murai Schist
Jurong
Mt Faber
Mt Guthrie
Rimau Pt
Sentosa
North
.
10 km scale
Fossil localities
Marine fossils in the Jurong Formation (from Lee & Zhou, 2009)
Scallops
Continental red-beds
in gravel
V
IV
III
II
Fossilised (woody?) vegetation, pieces of conifer, cycad or tree fern? Now coal + goethite
Lake deposits
River sands
Channelised
Sandstones
River delta
flowing into lake
NE
SW
KEY
Pleistocene Old
Alluvium
Jurong Formation
(white) with Queenstown Facies lake
beds (blue)
Middle Triassic
Granite
Rivers flowing into the sea
i.e. deltaic marine
Permian Gabbro
Artists impression of what Singapore might have looked like looking north from the
vicinity of Sentosa in the Late Triassic Period, 200 million years ago before the
mountains were eroded away to low hills.
In the distance: the Bukit Timah Fault scarp and the Bukit Timah Granite and Gombak
Gabbro form the hills behind. Note the volcanic ash clouds.
In the foreground: braided rivers drain into Lake Sentosa.
The dinosaur in the front centre is the predator Coelophysis .
Structural template
Bukit Timah
Fault trends NW/SE
Murai
Slate
Bukit Timah
Fault Scarp
Note distribution of lakes, swamps, rivers, fault scarps, alluvial fans. Shaded area is
Lake Sentosa. Lake valley forms due to extensional tectonics.
(After Fraser et al.1995).
Structural template
Bukit Timah
Fault trends NW/SE
Murai
Slate
Bukit Timah
Fault Scarp
Rise in sea level, +/- subsidence rate > rate of deposition = syn-rift basin with marine,
lake, river and alluvial facies: Extensional tectonics continue
(After Fraser et al.1995).
Geology Map of Singapore (after Lee & Zhou 2009) with the contact of the Jurong
Formation and the Singapore Granites drawn as the Bukit Temah Fault. Note folds in JF.
P. Ubin Jetty
Diorite 95+/-1 Ma
Murai
Slate
P. Sajahat
Dolerite: age?
s
s
folds
Recent alluvium
and land-fill
Old Alluvium
Jurong Formation
North
St Johns
.
10 km scale
Gabbro
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