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GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
Epoch and Age
Date
Availability
Insights into Cordilleran collisional processes: Early shared history of the Eocene Siletzia and Yakutat terranes as a ridge-centered oceanic plateau Available to Purchase
Sedimentary record of oceanic plateau accretion: Revisiting the Eocene to Miocene stratigraphy of the northern Olympic Peninsula, Washington (USA) Open Access
Neogene sedimentary record of the evolution of a translated strike-slip basin along the Denali fault system: Implications for timing of displacement, composite basin development, and regional tectonics of southern Alaska Open Access
Detrital zircon geochronology of modern river sediment in south-central Alaska: Provenance, magmatic, and tectonic insights into the Mesozoic and Cenozoic development of the southern Alaska convergent margin Open Access
Integrated reservoir characterization of enhanced oil recovery targets in mature basins: An example from the Tar Springs Formation, Rock Hill field, Illinois Basin, United States Available to Purchase
Detrital zircon geochronology and Hf isotope geochemistry of Mesozoic sedimentary basins in south-central Alaska: Insights into regional sediment transport, basin development, and tectonics along the NW Cordilleran margin Open Access
Late Miocene to Quaternary evolution of the McCallum Creek thrust system, Alaska: Insights for range-boundary thrusts in transpressional orogens Open Access
Early Paleogene fluvial regime shift in response to global warming: A subtropical record from the Tornillo Basin, west Texas, USA Available to Purchase
Detrital zircon record of Neogene exhumation of the central Alaska Range: A far-field upper plate response to flat-slab subduction Available to Purchase
Provenance signature of changing plate boundary conditions along a convergent margin: Detrital record of spreading-ridge and flat-slab subduction processes, Cenozoic forearc basins, Alaska Open Access
A thermochronometric view into an ancient landscape: Tectonic setting, development, and inversion of the Paleozoic eastern Paganzo basin, Argentina Open Access
Stratigraphic framework and estuarine depositional environments of the Miocene Bear Lake Formation, Bristol Bay Basin, Alaska: Onshore equivalents to potential reservoir strata in a frontier gas-rich basin Available to Purchase
Cenozoic tectonic processes along the southern Alaska convergent margin Open Access
Preface Available to Purchase
The geophysical character of southern Alaska—Implications for crustal evolution Available to Purchase
The southern Alaska continental margin has undergone a long and complicated history of plate convergence, subduction, accretion, and margin-parallel displacements. The crustal character of this continental margin is discernible through combined analysis of aeromagnetic and gravity data with key constraints from previous seismic interpretation. Regional magnetic data are particularly useful in defining broad geophysical domains. One of these domains, the south Alaska magnetic high, is the focus of this study. It is an intense and continuous magnetic high up to 200 km wide and ∼1500 km long extending from the Canadian border in the Wrangell Mountains west and southwest through Cook Inlet to the Bering Sea shelf. Crustal thickness beneath the south Alaska magnetic high is commonly 40–50 km. Gravity analysis indicates that the south Alaska magnetic high crust is dense. The south Alaska magnetic high spatially coincides with the Peninsular and Wrangellia terranes. The thick, dense, and magnetic character of this domain requires significant amounts of mafic rocks at intermediate to deep crustal levels. In Wrangellia these mafic rocks are likely to have been emplaced during Middle and (or) Late Triassic Nikolai Greenstone volcanism. In the Peninsular terrane, the most extensive period of mafic magmatism now known was associated with the Early Jurassic Talkeetna Formation volcanic arc. Thus the thick, dense, and magnetic character of the south Alaska magnetic high crust apparently developed as the response to mafic magmatism in both extensional (Wrangellia) and subduction-related arc (Peninsular terrane) settings. The south Alaska magnetic high is therefore a composite crustal feature. At least in Wrangellia, the crust was probably of average thickness (30 km) or greater prior to Triassic mafic magmatism. Up to 20 km (40%) of its present thickness may be due to the addition of Triassic mafic magmas. Throughout the south Alaska magnetic high, significant crustal growth was caused by the addition of mafic magmas at intermediate to deep crustal levels.
Crustal structure of Wrangellia and adjacent terranes inferred from geophysical studies along a transect through the northern Talkeetna Mountains Available to Purchase
Recent investigations of the Talkeetna Mountains in south-central Alaska were undertaken to study the region's framework geophysics and to reinterpret structures and crustal composition. Potential field (gravity and magnetic) and magnetotelluric (MT) data were collected along northwest-trending profiles as part of the U.S. Geological Survey's Talkeetna Mountains transect project. The Talkeetna Mountains transect area comprises eight 1:63,360 quadrangles (∼9500 km 2 ) in the Healy and Talkeetna Mountains 1° × 3° sheets that span four major lithostratigraphic terranes ( Glen et al., this volume ) including the Wrangellia and Peninsular terranes and two Mesozoic overlap assemblages inboard (northwest) of Wrangellia. These data were used here to develop 2½-dimensional models for the three profiles. Modeling results reveal prominent gravity, magnetic, and MT gradients (∼3.25 mGal/km, ∼100nT/km, ∼300 ohm-m/km) corresponding to the Talkeetna Suture Zone—a first-order crustal discontinuity in the deep crust that juxtaposes rocks with strongly contrasting rock properties. This discontinuity corresponds with the suture between relatively dense magnetic crust of Wrangellia (likely of oceanic composition) and relatively less dense transitional crust underlying Jurassic to Cretaceous flysch basins developed between Wrangellia and North America. Some area of the oceanic crust beneath Wrangellia may also have been underplated by mafic material during early to mid-Tertiary volcanism. The prominent crustal break underlies the Fog Lakes basin approximately where the Talkeetna thrust fault was previously mapped as a surface feature. Potential field and MT models, however, indicate that the Talkeetna Suture Zone crustal break along the transect is a deep (2–8 km), steeply west-dipping structure—not a shallow east-dipping Alpine nappe-like thrust. Indeed, most of the crustal breaks in the area appear to be steep in the geophysical data, which is consistent with regional geologic mapping that indicates that most of the faults are steep normal, reverse, strike-slip, or obliqueslip faults. Mapping further indicates that many of these features, which likely formed during Jurassic and Cretaceous time, such as the Talkeetna Suture Zone have reactivated in Tertiary time ( O'Neill et al., 2005 ).
Crustal structure of the Alaska Range orogen and Denali fault along the Richardson Highway Available to Purchase
A suite of geophysical data obtained along the Richardson Highway crosses the eastern Alaska Range and Denali fault and reveals the crustal structure of the orogen. Strong seismic reflections from within the orogen north of the Denali fault dip as steeply as 25° north and extend downward to depths between 20 and 25 km. These reflections reveal what is probably a shear zone that transects most of the crust and is part of a crustal-scale duplex structure that probably formed during the Late Cretaceous. These structures, however, appear to be relict because over the past 20 years, they have produced little or no seismicity despite the nearby Mw = 7.9 Denali fault earthquake that struck in 2002. The Denali fault is nonreflective, but we interpret modeled magnetotelluric (MT), gravity, and magnetic data to propose that the fault dips steeply to vertically. Modeling of MT data shows that aftershocks of the 2002 Denali fault earthquake occurred above a rock body that has low electrical resistivity (>10 ohm-m), which might signify the presence of fluids in the middle and lower crust.
Mesozoic and Cenozoic tectonic growth of southern Alaska: A sedimentary basin perspective Available to Purchase
Mesozoic and Cenozoic sedimentary strata exposed throughout southern Alaska contain a rich archive of information on the growth of collisional continental margins through the processes of terrane accretion, magmatism, accretionary prism development, and subduction of oceanic spreading ridges. Two major collisional events define the tectonic growth of southern Alaska: Mesozoic collision of the Wrangellia composite terrane and Cenozoic collision of the Yakutat terrane. The sedimentary record of these two collisional events can be summarized as follows. (1) Middle Jurassic volcaniclastic and sedimentary strata represent shallow-marine deposition in narrow subbasins adjacent to the volcanic edifice of the south-facing, intraoceanic Talkeetna arc. (2) Late Jurassic syndepositional regional shortening resulted in thick sections of conglomerate in proximal parts of both retroarc and forearc basins. In distal retroarc depocenters, fine-grained turbidite sedimentation commenced in a series of basins that presently extend for >2000 km along strike. This time interval also marked cessation of magmatism and rapid exhumation of the Talkeetna oceanic arc. We interpret these observations to reflect initial oblique collision, younging to the northwest, of the Wrangellia composite terrane with the continental margin of western North America. (3) During Early Cretaceous time, Jurassic retroarc basin strata were incorporated into an expanding northverging thrust belt, and sediment was bypassed into more distal collisional retroarc basins located within the suture zone. Compositional data from these collisional basins show that the Wrangellia composite terrane was exhumed to deep stratigraphic levels. Detrital zircon ages from strata in these basins record some sediment derivation from source areas with North American continental margin affinity. Our data clearly show that the Wrangellia composite terrane and the former continental margin were in close proximity by this time. Accretion of this oceanic terrane and associated basinal deposits marked one of the largest additions of juvenile crust to western North America. The collision of the Wrangellia composite terrane also resulted in a change in subduction parameters that eventually prompted development of a new south-facing arc system, the Chisana arc. Construction of this arc was contemporaneous with renewed forearc basin subsidence and sedimentation. (4) Late Early Cretaceous to early Late Cretaceous time was characterized by regional deformation of retroarc collisional basin strata by south-verging thrust faults that are part of a regional thrust belt that extends throughout the northwestern Cordillera. (5) Latest Cretaceous time was characterized by synorogenic sedimentation in forearc and retroarc basins related to regional shortening and exhumation of a coeval continentalmargin arc and older collisional basinal deposits. Forearc depocenters subsided into deep-water settings between the arc and expanding accretionary prism. Nonmarine to marginal-marine strata accumulated in retroarc depocenters influenced by syndepositional thrust-fault deformation. (6) Growth of the southern Alaska continental margin during Paleocene to Early Eocene time is defined by regional nonmarine deposition, magmatism within the suture zone, and expansion of the accretionary prism. Oblique subduction of an oceanic spreading ridge prompted diachronous deformation, synorogenic sedimentation, and magmatism. Subduction of progressively more buoyant, topographically higher lithosphere (the spreading ridge) followed by less buoyant, topographically lower lithosphere prompted coarsegrained alluvial-fluvial sedimentation and slab-window magmatism in remnant forearc basins. (7) Regional transpressive deformation characterized southern Alaska during Middle Eocene to Oligocene time. This deformation generated coarse-grained alluvial-fluvial sedimentation in narrow fault-bound basins along major strike-slip faults, including the Denali and Castle Mountain faults. (8) A second major phase of terrane collision and basin development shaped the southern margin of Alaska during latest Oligocene to Holocene time. Northward translation and collision of the Yakutat terrane, an excised continental fragment of western North America, prompted growth of the largest coastal mountain range on Earth, construction of a new magmatic arc, exhumation of older fore-arc basinal strata, and renewed uplift of the Alaska Range. The sedimentary record of this collisional event is contained in a collisional foreland basin on the north side of the Alaska Range, intraarc basins in the Wrangell Mountains, and a collisional foreland basin within the Yakutat terrane. This phase of collision continues to the present as evidenced by active mountain building, large-magnitude earthquakes, and some of the highest sediment accumulation rates on Earth.
The Border Ranges fault system, southern Alaska Available to Purchase
The Border Ranges fault system is the arc-forearc boundary of the Alaskan-Aleutian arc and separates a Mesozoic subduction accretionary complex (Chugach terrane) from Paleozoic to middle Mesozoic arc basement that together comprise an oceanic arc system accreted to North America during the Mesozoic. Research during the past 20 years has revealed a history of repeated reactivation of the fault system, such that only scattered vestiges remain of the original subduction-related processes that led to formation of the boundary. Throughout most of the fault trace, reactivations have produced a broad band of deformation from 5 to 30 km in width, involving both the arc basement and the accretionary complex, but the distribution of this deformation varies across the Alaskan orocline, implying much of the reactivation developed after or during the development of the orocline. Along the eastern limb of the orocline the Hanagita fault system typifies the Late Cretaceous to Cenozoic dextral strike slip reactivation of the fault system with two early episodes of strike slip separated by a contractional event, and a third, Neogene strike-slip system locally offsetting the boundary. Through all of these rejuvenations strike slip and contraction were slip partitioned, and all occurred during active subduction along the southern Alaska margin. The resultant deformation was decidedly one-sided with contraction focused on the outboard side of the boundary and strike slip focused along the boundary between crystalline arc basement and accreted sediment. Analogies with the modern Fairweather–St. Elias orogenic system in northern southeast Alaska indicate this one-sided deformation may originate from erosion on the oceanic side of the deformed belt. However, because the strike-slip Hanagita system faithfully follows the arc-forearc contact this characteristic could be a result of rheological contrasts across the rejuvenated boundary. In the hinge-zone of the Alaskan orocline the smooth fault trace of the Hanagita system is disrupted by cross-cutting faults, and Paleogene dextral slip of the Hanagita system is transferred into a complex cataclastic fault network in the crystalline assemblage that comprises the hanging wall of the fault system. Some of these faults record contraction superimposed on earlier strike-slip systems with a subsequent final strike-slip overprint, a history analogous to the Hanagita system, but with a more significant contractional component. One manifestation of this contraction is the Klanelneechena klippe, a large outlier of a low-angle brittle thrust system in the central Chugach Mountains that places Jurassic lower-crustal gabbros on the Chugach mélange. Recognition of unmetamorphosed sedimentary rocks caught up along the earlier strike-slip systems, but beneath the Klanelneechena klippe, provides an important piercing point for this strike-slip system because these sedimentary rocks contain marble clasts with a closest across-strike source more than 120 km to the north and east. Published thermochronology and structural data suggest this dextral slip does not carry through to the western limb of the orocline. Thus, we suggest that the Paleogene strike slip along the Border Ranges fault was transferred to dextral slip on the Castle Mountain fault through a complex fault array in the Matanuska Valley and strike-slip duplex systems in the northern Chugach Mountains. Restoration of this fault system using a strike-slip duplex model together with new piercing lines is consistent with the proposed Paleogene linkage of the Border Ranges and Castle Mountains systems with total dextral offset of ∼130 km, which we infer is the Paleogene offset on the paired fault system. Pre-Tertiary deformation along the Border Ranges fault remains poorly resolved along most of its trace. Because Early Jurassic blueschists occur locally along the Border Ranges fault system in close structural juxtaposition with Early Jurassic plutonic assemblages, the earliest phase of motion on the Border Ranges fault has been widely assumed to be Early Jurassic. Nonetheless, nowhere, to our knowledge, have structures within the fault zone produced dates from that period. This absence of older fabrics within the fault zone probably is due to a major period of subduction erosion, strike-slip truncation, or both, sometime between Middle Jurassic and mid-Early Cretaceous when most, or all, of the Chugach mélange was emplaced beneath the Border Ranges fault. In mid-Early Cretaceous time at least part of the boundary was a high-temperature thrust system with sinistral-oblique thrusting syntectonic to emplacement of near-trench plutons, a relationship best documented in the western Chugach Mountains. Similar left-oblique thrusting is observed along the Kenney Lake fault system, the structural contact beneath the Tonsina ultramafic assemblage in the eastern Chugach Mountains, although the footwall assemblage at Tonsina is a lower-T blueschist-greenschist assemblage with an uncertain metamorphic age. We tentatively correlate the Kenney Lake fault with the Early Cretaceous structures of the western Chugach Mountains as part of a regional Early Cretaceous thrusting event along the boundary. This event could record either reestablishment of convergence after a lull in subduction or a ridge-trench encounter followed by subduction accretion during continuous subduction. By Late Cretaceous time the dextral strike-slip initiated in what is now the eastern Chugach Mountains, but there is no clear evidence for this event in the western limb of the orocline. This observation suggests strike slip in the east may have been transferred westward into the accretionary complex prior to emplacement of the latest Cretaceous Chugach flysch.
Origin of narrow terranes and adjacent major terranes occurring along the Denali fault in the Eastern and Central Alaska Range, Alaska Available to Purchase
Several narrow terranes occur along the Denali fault in the Eastern and Central Alaska Range in Southern Alaska. These terranes are the Aurora Peak, Cottonwood Creek, Maclaren, Pingston, and Windy terranes, and a terrane of ultramafic and associated rocks. Exterior to the narrow terranes to the south is the major Wrangellia island arc composite terrane, and to the north is the major Yukon-Tanana metamorphosed continental margin terrane. Overlying mainly the northern margin of the Wrangellia composite terrane are the Kahiltna overlap assemblage to the west, and the Gravina-Nutzotin-Gambier volcanic-plutonic-sedimentary belt to the east and southeast. The various narrow terranes are interpreted as the result of translation of fragments of larger terranes during two major tectonic events: (1) Late Jurassic to mid-Cretaceous accretion of the Wrangellia island arc composite terrane (or superterrane composed of the Wrangellia, Peninsular, and Alexander terranes) and associated subduction zone complexes; and (2) starting in about the Late Cretaceous, dextral transport of the Wrangellia composite terrane along the Denali fault. These two major tectonic events caused: (1) entrapment of a lens of oceanic lithosphere along the suture belt between the Wrangellia composite terrane and the North American Craton Margin and outboard accreted terranes to form the ultramafic and mafic part of the terrane of ultra-mafic and associated rocks, (2) subsequent dextral translation along the Denali fault of the terrane of ultramafic and associated rocks, (3) dextral translation along the Denali fault of the Aurora Peak, Cottonwood Creek, and Maclaren and continental margin arc terranes from part of the Coast plutonic-metamorphic complex (Coast-North Cascade plutonic belt) in the southwest Yukon Territory or Southeastern Alaska, (4) dextral translation along the Denali fault of the Pingston passive continental margin from a locus along the North American Continental Margin, and (5) formation and dextral transport along the Denali fault of the mélange of the Windy terrane from fragments of the Gravina-Nutzotin-Gambier volcanic-plutonic-sedimentary belt and from the North American Continental Margin.