Abstract
The Chrystalls Beach Complex is interpreted as an accretionary melange within the Otago Schist on the South Island of New Zealand. Its stratigraphic position within the New Zealand Mesozoic accretionary prism is not well constrained, and the terrane affinity of the complex has remained enigmatic. Previous studies have focused on age relationships and sediment geochemistry. In this contribution we present geochemical data for metabasalts within the complex. Two distinctly different basalt compositions are found in the melange. Metabasalts outcropping at the northern end of the complex have an inferred mid-ocean ridge affinity, while metabasalts in the central part of the assemblage are suggested to represent ocean island basalts. It is speculated that the northern mid-ocean ridge basalts represent blocks from the crust of a subducting slab, while the ocean island basalts are part of a subducting seamount. These tectonic affinities are in agreement with melange formation during subduction of material below the Otago Schist protolith. In this setting, the melange may contain material derived from both the Caples and Rakaia Terranes, or represent a different terrane fragment.