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Cooling and uplift history of the Chiapas Massif and its influence on sedimentation and deformation in the adjacent Sierra de Chiapas Basin

Diego Villagomez and James Pindell
Cooling and uplift history of the Chiapas Massif and its influence on sedimentation and deformation in the adjacent Sierra de Chiapas Basin (in Southern and central Mexico; basement framework, tectonic evolution, and provenance of Mesozoic-Cenozoic basins, Uwe C. Martens (editor) and Roberto Stanley Molina Garza (editor))
Special Paper - Geological Society of America (December 2021) 546: 421-438

Abstract

We generated low-temperature thermochronological data on crystalline rocks from the Chiapas Massif in southern Mexico to constrain the complex relationship among tectonics, exhumation, and sedimentation in the region. Our data show that the first recorded cooling event occurred at ca. 40-25 Ma due to denudation of the sedimentary cover of the Chiapas Massif at slow rates of approximately 0.1 km/m.y. This was followed by a period of tectonic quiescence from ca. 25 to 14 Ma. Between ca. 14 and 7 Ma, cooling implying exhumation of the massif at rates of up to approximately 0.7 km/m.y. was renewed, and this was associated with, and possibly responsible for, the Miocene "Chiapanecan" deformational event observed in the Chiapas fold-and-thrust belt to the northeast of the massif. This younger uplift was also accompanied by the onset of arc-related magmatism beneath the massif, between ca. 13 and 9 Ma, along the Tonala shear zone at the Pacific coast. Since ca. 7 Ma, additional but slower cooling and exhumation are indicated along the length of the Chiapas Massif, and arc magmatism has jumped north by approximately 125 km from the Tonala shear zone into the Chiapas fold-and-thrust belt. Concurrently, subsidence and sedimentation have persisted along the offshore Tehuantepec Shelf to the south, suggesting that the Tonala shear zone has been recently active (despite no magnitude 4 or larger earthquakes), with up-to-the-north vertical displacement. We interpret the exhumation at ca. 40-25 Ma to pertain to displacement of the Chortis block along the paleo-Motagua fault zone, either as a northward propagation of a basement thrust beneath the massif within a regional transpressional setting, or as a deep, ductile crustal thickening and attendant isostatic uplift of the southern flank of the massif during the transpressional passage of the Chortis block. The ensuing quiescence (25-14 Ma) coincided, we believe, with the passage of the "western tail" of Chortis, which is internally deformed and perhaps transferred compressive stress less effectively than had the central, continental core of the Chortis block earlier. Renewed uplift and exhumation of the region began by ca. 14-10 Ma. An onset at ca. 10 Ma is probably the best estimate for the beginning of exhumation of the northwestern and central portions of the Chiapas Massif, whereas the present-day southeastern tip of the massif (potentially an allochthonous sliver belonging to the Chortis block) started to exhume earlier, at ca. 14 Ma. By ca. 13 Ma, arc magmatism had moved into the western Tehuantepec area, marking the onset of subduction of the Cocos plate beneath the Chiapas Massif. Hence, we interpret the main period of uplift of the Chiapas Massif and primary shortening of the Chiapas fold-and-thrust belt (ca. 14-7 Ma) as being driven by the establishment of Cocos subduction beneath the area.


ISSN: 0072-1077
EISSN: 2331-219X
Coden: GSAPAZ
Serial Title: Special Paper - Geological Society of America
Serial Volume: 546
Title: Cooling and uplift history of the Chiapas Massif and its influence on sedimentation and deformation in the adjacent Sierra de Chiapas Basin
Title: Southern and central Mexico; basement framework, tectonic evolution, and provenance of Mesozoic-Cenozoic basins
Author(s): Villagomez, DiegoPindell, James
Author(s): Martens, Uwe C.editor
Author(s): Molina Garza, Roberto Stanleyeditor
Affiliation: Tectonic Analysis, West Sussex, United Kingdom
Affiliation: S2SGeo, Walnut Creek, CA, United States
Pages: 421-438
Published: 20211209
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
ISBN: 9780813725468
ISBN: 9780813795461
References: 69
Accession Number: 2022-061090
Categories: Structural geology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Annotation: Includes appendix
Illustration Description: illus. incl. strat. col., 3 tables, sketch map
N14°00'00" - N18°00'00", W96°00'00" - W90°00'00"
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2022, American Geosciences Institute.
Update Code: 202221
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