Abstract
The development of landsurfaces in the north of the Northern Territory has traditionally been attributed to successive episodes of uplift, erosion and weathering. The lower and younger two of the four landsurfaces attributed to such development, the Wave Hill and Koolpinyah surfaces, dominate the landscape in the Darwin region. Investigations of the relationship between the Cretaceous stratigraphy and the nature of deep weathering in the Darwin region show that these surfaces are structurally controlled. A bioturbated bed in the Darwin Member of the Cretaceous Bathurst Island Formation has limited the depth of weathering in this region mainly to the level of the Koolpinyah surface. A silicified horizon in the deeply weathered Cretaceous strata has controlled the level of the Koolpinyah and Wave Hill surfaces elsewhere. Furthermore, the presence of detrital laterite profiles, being the main form of evidence used for the identification of both of these surfaces, is challenged; in many localities these detrital profiles are in fact in situ, discounting the idea that these surfaces developed as a result of successive episodes of pediplanation. Similarities are drawn between the origin of these surfaces and the development of equivalent surfaces in the Daly River Basin to the south of Darwin. The practice of extrapolation between surfaces across widely separated regions of northern Australia has been previously shown to be based on tenuous grounds. The same degree of tenuity must now be placed upon such extrapolations in the north of the Northern Territory.

This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit: