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Ophiolitic basement to the Great Valley forearc basin, California, from seismic and gravity data; implications for crustal growth at the North American continental margin

N. J. Godfrey, B. C. Beaudoin, S. L. Klemperer, A. R. Levander, J. H. Luetgert, A. S. Meltzer, W. D. Mooney and A. M. Trehu
Ophiolitic basement to the Great Valley forearc basin, California, from seismic and gravity data; implications for crustal growth at the North American continental margin
Geological Society of America Bulletin (December 1997) 109 (12): 1536-1562

Abstract

The nature of the Great Valley basement, whether oceanic or continental, has long been a source of controversy. A velocity model (derived from a 200-km-long east-west reflection-refraction profile collected south of the Mendocino triple junction, northern California, in 1993), further constrained by density and magnetic models, reveals an ophiolite underlying the Great Valley (Great Valley ophiolite), which in turn is underlain by a westward extension of lower-density continental crust (Sierran affinity material). We used an integrated modeling philosophy, first modeling the seismic-refraction data to obtain a final velocity model, and then modeling the long-wavelength features of the gravity data to obtain a final density model that is constrained in the upper crust by our velocity model. The crustal section of Great Valley ophiolite is 7-8 km thick, and the Great Valley ophiolite relict oceanic Moho is at 11-16 km depth. The Great Valley ophiolite does not extend west beneath the Coast Ranges, but only as far as the western margin of the Great Valley, where the 5-7-km-thick Great Valley ophiolite mantle section dips west into the present-day mantle. There are 16-18 km of lower-density Sierran affinity material beneath the Great Valley ophiolite mantle section, such that a second, deeper, "present-day" continental Moho is at about 34 km depth. At mid-crustal depths, the boundary between the eastern extent of the Great Valley ophiolite and the western extent of Sierran affinity material is a near-vertical velocity and density discontinuity about 80 km east of the western margin of the Great Valley. Our model has important implications for crustal growth at the North American continental margin. We suggest that a thick ophiolite sequence was obducted onto continental material, probably during the Jurassic Nevadan orogeny, so that the Great Valley basement is oceanic crust above oceanic mantle vertically stacked above continental crust and continental mantle.


ISSN: 0016-7606
EISSN: 1943-2674
Coden: BUGMAF
Serial Title: Geological Society of America Bulletin
Serial Volume: 109
Serial Issue: 12
Title: Ophiolitic basement to the Great Valley forearc basin, California, from seismic and gravity data; implications for crustal growth at the North American continental margin
Affiliation: Stanford University, Department of Geophysics, Stanford, CA, United States
Affiliation: Mendocino Working GroupUnited States
Pages: 1536-1562
Published: 199712
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
Accession Number: 1997-072386
Categories: Solid-earth geophysics
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 5 tables
N32°30'00" - N42°00'00", W124°30'00" - W114°15'00"
Secondary Affiliation: Rice University, USA, United StatesU. S. Geological Survey, USA, United StatesLehigh University, USA, United StatesOregon State University, USA, United States
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2019, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
Update Code: 199724
Program Name: USGSOPNon-USGS publications with USGS authors
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