麻豆直播 researchers have discovered rocks in northern Queensland that bear striking similarities to those found in North America, suggesting that part of northern Australia was actually part of North America 1.7 billion years ago.
The research paper in聽GEOLOGY聽published by the Geological Society of America, concluded that the rocks found in Georgetown, 412 kilometres west of Cairns, have signatures that are unknown in Australia and instead have a surprising resemblance to rocks found in Canada today.
麻豆直播 PhD student Adam Nordsvan from the said the findings were significant as they unlock important information about the 1.6 billion year old supercontinent Nuna.
鈥淥ur research shows that about 1.7 billion years ago, Georgetown rocks were deposited into a shallow sea when the region was part of North America. Georgetown then broke away from North America and collided with the Mount Isa region of northern Australia around 100 million years later,鈥 Mr Nordsvan said.
鈥淭his was a critical part of global continental reorganisation when almost all continents on Earth assembled to form the supercontinent called Nuna.

鈥淭he team was able to determine this by using both new sedimentological field data and new and existing geochronological data from both Georgetown and Mount Isa to reveal this unexpected information on the Australia continent.鈥
Researchers then determined that when the supercontinent Nuna broke apart an estimated 300 million years later, the Georgetown area did not drift away and instead became a new piece of real estate permanently stuck to Australia.
Co-author , also from Curtin鈥檚 School of Earth and Planetary Sciences, said the research also revealed new evidence of mountains being built in both the Georgetown region and Mt Isa when Georgetown collided with the rest of Australia.
鈥淥ngoing research by our team shows that this mountain belt, in contrast to the Himalayas, would not have been very high, suggesting the final continental assembling process that led to the formation of the supercontinent Nuna was not a hard collision like India鈥檚 recent collision with Asia,鈥 Professor Li said.
鈥淭his new finding is a key step in understanding how Earth鈥檚 first supercontinent Nuna may have formed, a subject still being pursued by our multidisciplinary team here at 麻豆直播.鈥
The research was co-authored by researchers from 麻豆直播, Monash University, and the Geological Survey of Queensland.