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GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Africa
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Southern Africa
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Karoo Basin (1)
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South Africa (1)
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Altiplano (2)
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Atlantic Ocean
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South Atlantic
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Pacific Ocean
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Southeast Pacific
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South Pacific
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Pacific region
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Puna (2)
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commodities
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Pb-208/Pb-206 (1)
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rare earths
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Primary terms
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Africa
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Southern Africa
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Atlantic Ocean
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carbon
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Tertiary
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Central America
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crust (14)
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Deep Sea Drilling Project
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IPOD
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lead
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Pb-208/Pb-204 (2)
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Pb-208/Pb-206 (1)
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North America
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ocean floors (4)
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GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
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Availability
Mesozoic rifting in SW Gondwana and break-up of the Southern South Atlantic Ocean Available to Purchase
Abstract The opening of the South Atlantic Ocean in the Early Cretaceous was only the final stage of the complex rifting process of SW Gondwana. In this contribution, we reassess the chronology of Mesozoic basin formation in southern South America and Africa and integrate it in the long-term rifting and break-up history of SW Gondwana. During the Triassic, after the Gondwanides orogeny, plate-scale instabilities produced intracontinental rifting in Africa, and retro-arc extension on the SW-margin of Gondwana. This process was followed and accentuated by the impingement of the Karoo plume in the Early Jurassic, which triggered rifting in East Africa and ultimately produced the break-up of Eastern from Western Gondwana in the Middle Jurassic. Retro-arc extension continued to affect the palaeo-Pacific margin, with emplacement of the Chon Aike magmatic province in the Patagonian retro-arc during the Early–Middle Jurassic. By the Late Jurassic, retro-arc rifting reached a point of oceanic crust accretion, with the establishment of the Rocas Verdes back-arc basin in southern Patagonia, together with the formation of the Weddell Sea further south, between the South American plate and Antarctica. The core of the Late Paleozoic Gondwanides orogen, between southern South America and Africa, was subjected to oblique rifting at this time and produced the Outeniqua and Rawson/Valdés basins. This area was the locus of extension and oceanization in the Early Cretaceous associated with a rotation of the stress field from NE–SW to east–west extension. The formation of the South Atlantic Ocean resulted from lithospheric extension and was accompanied by extensive intrusive magmatism and extrusive flood basalts identified as seaward dipping reflectors, which were emplaced diachronically from south to north, along different segments along both conjugate margins. These volcanic rocks form the South Atlantic Large Igneous Province. The chronology of the South Atlantic opening and the magmatic sources and processes associated with the formation of seaward dipping reflectors remain interpretative as they have only been studied on seismic data but are still undrilled; hence, scientific drilling will be key to unravel many of these unknowns.
Hans Keidel and Alexander du Toit's relationship and its impact on Wegener's Continental Drift hypothesis Available to Purchase
Abstract This work presents research that we intended to publish jointly with Maarten de Wit on the importance of Hans Keidel in the definition of the Gondwanides and in his pioneering proposal of correlation between the Sierras de la Ventana mountain system in the province of Buenos Aires, Argentina, and its counterpart in the Cape System in South Africa. Keidel's proposals were used by Wegener in the 1920 second edition of his ‘Theory on Continental Drift’. Keidel's role and his ideas of correlation were recognized and strengthened by du Toit's fieldwork in 1923 in the Sierras de la Ventana and which he left behind in his field notebook. Du Toit has the credit of being the first to carry out fieldwork on both continents. His observations and his precise correlations confirmed Keidel's hypotheses through his 1927 publication and his book on the Wandering Continents. It is noteworthy that after Wegener's death in 1930, du Toit defended the Theory of Continental Drift for years almost alone. The work is documented with photographs from du Toit's trip to South America, the originals of which have been lost in the devastating 2021 fire at the Jagger Library at the University of Cape Town.
The role of slab geometry in the exhumation of cordilleran-type orogens and their forelands: Insights from northern Patagonia Open Access
2 An Exceptional Tectonic Setting along the Andean Continental Margin Available to Purchase
ABSTRACT The Late Jurassic–Early Cretaceous Vaca Muerta Formation deposited in the Neuquén Basin has an exceptional development, in the thickness of its sequences and in the volume of its sedimentary record. These marine deposits, which constituted the source rock of conventional oil and gas for more than a century, continue to be an important source of unconventional hydrocarbons as a producer of oil- and gas-shale and have a large potential future. When the exceptional characteristics of the Vaca Muerta Formation are compared to other basins of Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous age along the same continental margin, they stand out even more. The basin development and preservation parallel to the continental margin are discontinued by important processes of subduction erosion. The analysis of the thickest and widest part of the basin (the Neuquén Embayment) shows that its large development is related to the combination of two rift systems, a north–northwest system truncated by an almost east–west system. These two extensional systems were developed in the hanging-walls of sutures between different crustal terranes that formed the basement of the Neuquén Basin. The paleogeographic development and the structure of these basement terranes are the control that conferred to the Neuquén Basin and its Embayment their unique characteristics.
Tectonic Evolution of the Central Andes: From Terrane Accretion to Crustal Delamination Available to Purchase
ABSTRACT The analysis of the pre-Andean history of the Central Andes shows a complex tectonic evolution. The basement of the Andean continental margin was formed by the accretion of Precambrian blocks during the formation of Rodinia in late Mesoproterozoic times. There are two magmatic arcs of Grenvillian age, one developed on the margin of the craton, known as the Sunsas belt, and another on the accreted terranes. The suture between these blocks with the Amazonian craton has been continuously reactivated by tectonic and magmatic processes. The terranes of Paracas and Arequipa, both of Grenvillian age, have a contrasting Paleozoic evolution. The Arequipa terrane amalgamated to the craton by the end of the Mesoproterozoic, and during the Paleozoic its suture acted as a crustal weakness zone. This zone concentrated the extension and the formation of a large platform in the retro-arc basin, where the Eopaleozoic sediments accumulated. The Famatinian magmatic arc of Ordovician age (475–460 Ma) is preserved in this segment along the continental margin. The Eopaleozoic extension that affected the Paracas terrane reopened the old suture and formed oceanic crust between Amazonia and Paracas. The subduction of this oceanic crust developed a magmatic arc over the cratonic margin, which is preserved in the Eastern Cordillera of Peru as orthogneisses associated with metamorphic rocks of Famatinian age. There are ophiolitic assemblages, paired metamorphic belts, and intense deformation associated with the Paracas collision (~460 Ma)against the Amazonian craton. In northern Eastern Cordillera of Peru the late Paleozoic orogen has within-plate granitic belts and was far away from the active margin. The orogen was deformed and uplifted in two phases (336–285 Ma and 280–235 Ma) known as the early and late Gondwanide orogenies. They are preserved as medium grade metamorphic belts developed along the Paracas segment. Further south along the Arequipa segment in southern Peru and Bolivia, the late Paleozoic–Triassic rocks are represented by granites and acidic volcanic rocks, which are not metamorphosed and are associated with sedimentary rocks. Relics of a magmatic arc are exposed as tonalites and metamorphic rocks (~260 Ma) along the northern continental margin of Peru and in the near offshore platform. The extensional regime that dominated most of the Mesozoic developed rift basins in the hanging-wall of the terrane sutures, which controlled the structural highs and basin margins. The Peruvian Late Cretaceous orogeny produced the emplacement of the Coastal batholith, the beginning of deformation along the coast, and the first foreland basins. The giant Ayabacas submarine syn-tectonic collapse is also controlled by previous sutures. The Cenozoic Andean evolution was dominated by a wave of shallowing of the subducted slab, the migration of the magmatism to the foreland, the steepening of the oceanic plate, and the consequent “inner arc” magmatism. The “inner arc” plutonic and volcanic rocks are the expression of deep crustal melts, associated with crustal delamination and lithospheric mantle removal. The flattening of the oceanic slab is related to ablative subduction and shortening in the Altiplano and Eastern Cordillera. The steepening is associated with rapid removal of mantle lithosphere and crustal delamination, expressed at surface by the “inner arc” magmatism. The suture crustal weakness zones between different terranes partially controlled the location of the delaminated blocks and the “inner arc” magmatism. Both processes triggered the lower crust ductile shortening and subsequent upper crustal brittle development of the sub-Andean fold-and-thrust belt.
Tectono-stratigraphic evolution of the Andean Orogen between 31 and 37°S (Chile and Western Argentina) Available to Purchase
Abstract In this classic segment, many tectonic processes, like flat-subduction, terrane accretion and steepening of the subduction, among others, provide a robust framework for their understanding. Five orogenic cycles, with variations in location and type of magmatism, tectonic regimes and development of different accretionary prisms, show a complex evolution. Accretion of a continental terrane in the Pampean cycle exhumed lower to middle crust in Early Cambrian. The Ordovician magmatic arc, associated metamorphism and foreland basin formation characterized the Famatinian cycle. In Late Devonian, the collision of Chilenia and associated high-pressure/low-temperature metamorphism contrasts with the late Palaeozoic accretionary prisms. Contractional deformation in Early to Middle Permian was followed by extension and rhyolitic (Choiyoi) magmatism. Triassic to earliest Jurassic rifting was followed by subduction and extension, dominated by Pacific marine ingressions, during Jurassic and Early Cretaceous. The Late Cretaceous was characterized by uplift and exhumation of the Andean Cordillera. An Atlantic ingression occurred in latest Cretaceous. Cenozoic contraction and uplift pulses alternate with Oligocene extension. Late Cenozoic subduction was characterized by the Pampean flat-subduction, the clockwise block tectonic rotations in the normal subduction segments and the magmatism in Payenia. These processes provide evidence that the Andean tectonic model is far from a straightforward geological evolution.
U–Pb detrital zircon ages of Upper Jurassic continental successions: implications for the provenance and absolute age of the Jurassic–Cretaceous boundary in the Neuquén Basin Available to Purchase
Abstract New U–Pb detrital zircon ages are presented for the Tordillo Formation. The ages indicate that the most important source region of sediment supply was the Jurassic Andean arc (peaks at c. 144, 153 and 178 Ma), although two secondary sources were defined at c. 218 and 275 Ma. Temporal variation in the provenance indicates that at the beginning of the sedimentation, Carboniferous to Lower Jurassic magmatic rocks and Lower Palaeozoic metamorphic rocks were the most important sources. Towards the top, the data suggest that the Andean arc becomes the main source region. The comparison between provenance patterns of the Tordillo Formation and of the Avilé Member (Agrio Formation) showed some differences. In the former, the arc region played a considerable role as a source region, but this is not identified in the latter. The results permit a statistically robust estimation of the maximum deposition age for the Tordillo Formation at c. 144 Ma. This younger age represents a discrepancy of at least 7 Ma from the absolute age of the Kimmeridgian and Tithonian boundary (from the chronostratigraphic timescale accepted by the International Commission of Stratigraphy, IUGS), and has strong implications for the absolute age of the Jurassic–Cretaceous boundary. Supplementary material: Sample coordinates, values of the sandstone compositional framework and U–Pb (LAM-MC-ICP-MS) age measurements of zircons grains are available at http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/SUP18718
The Neocomian of Chachahuén (Mendoza, Argentina): evidence of a broken foreland associated with the Payenia flat-slab Available to Purchase
Abstract Isolated marine sedimentary Lower Cretaceous deposits crop out in the foreland of the Neuquén Basin, west-central Argentina. They are the result of an anomalous uplift of the Sierra de Chachahuén in the far foreland region. These outcrops are assigned to the Agrio Formation based on their rich fossil contents. In particular, the study reveals a unique outcrop of continental facies along the eastern proximal margin of the basin that were known only from core wells, and constitutes the first exposed evidence at the surface. These deformed deposits are 70 km from the Andean orogenic front and present 2 km of local uplift produced by high-angle basement reverse faults that reactivated a previous Early Mesozoic rift system. The increase in compression was related to the decrease in the subduction angle. This fact, together with the expansion of the magmatic arc, controlled the Chachahuén calc-alkaline Late Miocene volcanic centre and the uplift of the Mesozoic deposits in the foreland. This broken foreland was associated with localized heating of the Miocene volcanic centre that produced the rising of the brittle-ductile transitions. This fact weakens the foreland area, which was broken by compression during the development of the Payenia flat-slab.
Influence of pre-Andean history over Cenozoic foreland deformation: Structural styles in the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt at 35°S, Andes of Argentina Open Access
Collision of the Mocha fracture zone and a <4 Ma old wave of orogenic uplift in the Andes (36°–38°S) Open Access
Preface Available to Purchase
Anatomy and global context of the North American Cordillera Available to Purchase
The Cordillera of western North America occupies the central 5000 km of the circum-Pacific orogenic belt, which extends for 25,000 km along a great-circle path from Taiwan to the Antarctic Peninsula. The North American Cordillera is anomalous because dextral transform faults along its western flank have supplanted subduction zones, the hallmark of circum-Pacific tectonism, along much of the Cordilleran continental margin since mid-Cenozoic time. The linear continuity of the Cordilleran orogen terminates on the north in the Arctic region and on the south in the Mesoamerican region at sinistral transform faults of Mesozoic and Cenozoic age, respectively. The Cordilleran margin of Laurentia was formed initially by rift breakup of the supercontinent Rodinia followed by development of the Neoproterozoic to early Paleozoic Cordilleran miogeocline along a passive continental margin, but it was modified in California and Mexico by Permian to Triassic transform truncation of Paleozoic tectonic trends. Late Paleozoic and Mesozoic accretion of oceanic island arcs and subduction complexes expanded the width of the Cordilleran orogen both before and after Triassic initiation of ancestral circum-Pacific subduction beneath the Cordilleran margin. Mesozoic to Cenozoic extensions and counterparts of Cordilleran accreted terranes extend southward into the Caribbean Antilles and northern South America. The development of successive forearc and retroforeland basins accompanied the progress of Cordilleran orogenesis over time, and coeval Mesozoic to Cenozoic batholith belts reflect continuing plate consumption at subduction zones along the continental margin. The assembly of subduction complexes along the Cordilleran continental margin continued into Cenozoic time, but dextral strike slip along the Pacific flank of the Cordilleran orogen displaced elongate coastal segments of the orogen northward during Cenozoic time. In the United States and Mexico, Laramide breakup of the Cordilleran foreland during shallow slab subduction and crustal extension within the Basin and Range taphrogen also expanded the width of the Cordilleran orogen during Cenozoic time.
Anatomy and global context of the Andes: Main geologic features and the Andean orogenic cycle Available to Purchase
The Andes make up the largest orogenic system developed by subduction of oceanic crust along a continental margin. Subduction began soon after the breakup of Rodinia in Late Proterozoic times, and since that time, it has been intermittently active up to the present. The evolution of the Pacific margin of South America during the Paleozoic occurred in the following stages: (1) initial Proterozoic rifting followed by subduction and final re-amalgamation of the margin in Early Cambrian times, as depicted by the Puncoviscana and Tucavaca Basins and related granitoids in southern Bolivia and northern Argentina; (2) a later phase of rifting in the Middle Cambrian, and subsequent collisions in Middle Ordovician times of parautochthonous terranes derived from Gondwana, such as Paracas, Arequipa, and Antofalla, and exotic terranes originating in Laurentia, such as Cuyania, Chilenia and Chibcha; (3) final Permian collision between South America and North America to form Pangea during the Alleghanides orogeny, leaving behind rifted pieces of Laurentia as the Tahami and Tahuin terranes in the Northern Andes and other poorly known orthogneisses in the Cordillera Real of Ecuador in the Late Permian–Early Triassic; and (4) amalgamation of the Mejillonia and Patagonia terranes in Early Permian times, representing the last convergence episodes recorded in the margin during the Gondwanides orogeny. These rifting episodes and subsequent collisions along the continental margin were the result of changes of the absolute motion of Gondwana related to global plate reorganizations during Proterozoic to Paleozoic times. Generalized rifting during Pangea breakup in the Triassic concentrated extension in the hanging wall of the sutures that amalgamated the Paleozoic terranes. The opening of the Indian Ocean in Early Jurassic times was associated with a new phase of subduction along the continental margin. The northeastward absolute motion of western Gondwana produced a negative trench roll-back velocity that controlled subduction under an extensional regime until late Early Cretaceous times. The Northern Andes of Venezuela, Colombia, and Ecuador record a series of collisions of island arcs and oceanic plateaus from the Early Cretaceous to the middle Miocene as a result of interaction with the Caribbean plate. The remaining Central and Southern Andes record periods of orogenesis and mountain building alternating with periods of quiescence and absence of deformation as recorded in parts of the Oligocene. Based on the generalized occurrence of flat-slab subduction episodes through time, as recorded in most of the Andean segments in Cenozoic and older times, this paper presents a conceptual orogenic cycle that accounts for the sequence of quiescence, minor arc magmatism, expansion and migration of the volcanic fronts, deformation, subsequent lithospheric and crustal delamination, and final foreland fold-and-thrust development. These episodes are related to shallowing and steepening of the subduction zones through time. This conceptual cycle, similar to the Laramide orogeny in North America, may be recognized wherever a subduction system is or was active in a continental margin.
Neogene collision and deformation of convergent margins along the backbone of the Americas Available to Purchase
Along Pacific convergent margins of the Americas, high-standing relief on the subducting oceanic plate “collides” with continental slopes and subducts. Features common to many collisions are uplift of the continental margin, accelerated seafloor erosion, accelerated basal subduction erosion, a flat slab, and a lack of active volcanism. Each collision along America’s margins has exceptions to a single explanation. Subduction of an ~600 km segment of the Yakutat terrane is associated with >5000-m-high coastal mountains. The terrane may currently be adding its unsubducted mass to the continent by a seaward jump of the deformation front and could be a model for docking of terranes in the past. Cocos Ridge subduction is associated with >3000-m-high mountains, but its shallow subduction zone is not followed by a flat slab. The entry point of the Nazca and Juan Fernandez Ridges into the subduction zone has migrated southward along the South American margin and the adjacent coast without unusually high mountains. The Nazca Ridge and Juan Fernandez Ridges are not actively spreading but the Chile Rise collision is a triple junction. These collisions form barriers to trench sediment transport and separate accreting from eroding segments of the frontal prism. They also occur at the separation of a flat slab from a steeply dipping one. At a smaller scale, the subduction of seamounts and lesser ridges causes temporary surface uplift as long as they remain attached to the subducting plate. Off Costa Rica, these features remain attached beneath the continental shelf. They illustrate, at a small scale, the processes of collision.
Relation of flat subduction to magmatism and deformation in the western United States Available to Purchase
Flat subduction of the Farallon plate beneath the western United States during the Laramide orogeny was caused by the combined effects of oceanic plateau subduction and unusually great suction in the mantle wedge, the latter of which was caused by the shallowing slab approaching the North American craton root. Once in contact with basal North America, the slab cooled and hydrated the lithosphere. Upon removal, asthenospheric contact with lithosphere resulted in magma production that was especially intense where the basal lithosphere was fertile (in what now is the Basin and Range Province), and this heating weakened the lithosphere and made it convectively unstable. Small-scale convection has since affected many areas. With slab sinking and unloading, the western United States elevated into a broad plateau, and the weak portion gravitationally collapsed. With development of a transform plate boundary, the western part of the weak zone became entrained with the Pacific plate, and deformation there is dominated by shear.
Structural geologic evolution of the Colorado Plateau Available to Purchase
The Colorado Plateau is composed of Neoproterozoic, Paleozoic, and Mesozoic sedimentary rocks overlying mechanically heterogeneous latest Paleoproterozoic and Mesoproterozoic crystalline basement containing shear zones. The structure of the plateau is dominated by ten major basement-cored uplifts and associated monoclines, which were constructed during the Late Cretaceous through early Tertiary Laramide orogeny. Structural relief on the uplifts ranges up to 2 km. Each uplift is a highly asymmetric, doubly plunging anticline residing in the hanging wall of a (generally) blind crustal shear zone with reverse or reverse/oblique-slip displacement. The master shear zones are rooted in basement, and many, if not most, originated along reactivated, dominantly Neoproterozoic shear zones. These can be observed in several of the uplifts and within basement exposures of central Arizona that project “down-structure” northward beneath the Colorado Plateau. The basement shear zones, which were reactivated by crustal shortening, formed largely as a result of intracratonic rifting, and thus the system of Colorado Plateau uplifts is largely a product of inversion tectonics. The overall deformational style is commonly referred to as “Laramide,” and this is how we use this term here. In order to estimate the dip of basement faults beneath uplifts, we applied trishear modeling to the Circle Cliffs uplift and the San Rafael swell. Detailed and repeated applications of trishear inverse- and forward-modeling for each of these uplifts suggest to us that the uplifts require initiation along a low-angle shear zone (between ~20° and ~40°), an initial shear-zone tip well below the basement-cover contact, a propagation (p) to slip (s) ratio that is higher for mechanically stiffer rocks and lower for mechanically softer rocks, a planar shear-zone geometry, and a trishear angle of ~100°. These are new results, and they demonstrate that the basement uplifts, arches, and monoclines have cohesive geometries that reflect fault-propagation folding in general and trishear fault-propagation in particular. Expressions of the shear zones in uppermost basement may in some cases be neoformed shear zones that broke loose as “footwall shortcuts” from the deeper reactivated zones. Structural analysis of outcrop-scale structures permitted determination of horizontal-shortening directions in the Paleozoic and Mesozoic sedimentary cover of the uplifts. These arrange themselves into two groupings of uplifts, one that reveals NE/SW-directed shortening, and a second that reveals NW/SE shortening. Because the strain in cover strata is localized to the upward projections of the blind shear zones, and because the measured shortening directions are uniform across a given uplift (independent of variations in the strike of the bounding monocline), it seems clear that the regional stresses ultimately responsible for deformation were transmitted through the basement at a deeper level. Thus, the stresses responsible for deformation of the cover may be interpreted as a reflection of basement strain. The basement strain (expressed as oblique shear displacements into cover driven by reactivations of dominantly Neoproterozoic normal-shear zones) was a response to regional tectonic stresses and, ultimately, plate-generated tectonic stresses. The driving mechanism for the Sevier fold-and-thrust belt was coupled to subduction of the Farallon plate, perhaps enhanced by slab flattening and generation of higher traction along the base of the lithosphere. However, the disparate shortening directions documented here suggest that two tectonic drivers may have operated on the Colorado Plateau: (1) gravitational spreading of the topographically high Sevier thrust belt on the northwest side of the plateau adjacent to an active Charleston-Nebo salient of the Sevier thrust belt, which imparted northwest-southeast shortening; and (2) northeast-southwest shortening driven by the flat slab. The effect of the two drivers tended to “crumple” part of the region in a bidirectional vise, creating added complications to structural patterns. Testing of this idea will require, among other things, very precise age determinations of progressive deformation of the Colorado Plateau within the latest Cretaceous to early Tertiary time window, and sophisticated finite-element modeling to evaluate the nature of the deformation gradients that would be induced by the two drivers.
Three-dimensional kinematics of Laramide, basement-involved Rocky Mountain deformation, USA: Insights from minor faults and GIS-enhanced structure maps Available to Purchase
Contractional, basement-involved foreland deformation in the Rocky Mountains of the conterminous United States occurred during the latest Cretaceous to Paleogene Laramide orogeny. Current kinematic hypotheses for the Laramide orogeny include single-stage NE- to E-directed shortening, sequential multidirectional shortening, and transpressive deformation partitioned between NW-striking thrust and N-striking strike-slip faults. In part due to this kinematic uncertainty, the links between Laramide deformation and plate-margin processes are unresolved, and proposed driving forces range from external stresses paralleling plate convergence to internal stresses due to gravitational collapse of the Cordilleran thrust belt. To determine the tectonic controls on Laramide deformation, kinematic data from minor faults (n = 21,129) were combined with a geographic information system (GIS) database quantifying Rocky Mountain structural trends. Minor fault data were collected from a variety of pre-Laramide units to calculate average Laramide slip (N67E-01) and maximum compressive stress (N67E-02) directions for the Rocky Mountains. These largely unimodal, subhorizontal slip and compression directions vary slightly in space; more E-W directions occur in the southern and eastern Rockies, and more NE-SW directions are found near the Colorado Plateau. This kinematic framework was extended to the entire orogen using map data for faults, folds, arches, and Precambrian fabrics from Wyoming, Colorado, northern New Mexico, southeastern Utah, and northeastern Arizona. Vector mean calculations and length-weighted rose diagrams show that Precambrian fabrics are at a high angle to most larger Phanerozoic structures but are commonly reactivated by smaller structures. Ancestral Rocky Mountain structures are subparallel to Laramide structures, suggesting similar tectonic mechanisms. Laramide faults, defined by their involvement of Mesozoic and Paleogene strata but not Neogene strata, are complex, and preexisting weaknesses and minor strain components commonly predominate. In contrast, Laramide fold (avg. N24W) and arch (avg. N23W) axis trends are oriented perpendicular to minor fault slip and compression directions due to their generation by thrust-related folding. Laramide deformation shows the primary external influence of ENE-directed shortening paralleling published convergence vectors between the North American and Farallon plates. Slightly radial shortening directions, from more NE-directed to the north to more E-directed to the south, suggest focused contraction originating near current-day southern California. A slight clockwise rotation of shortening directions going from west to east is consistent with proposed changes in Farallon–North American plate trajectories as the orogen expanded eastward. Additional complexities caused by localized preexisting weaknesses and impingement by the adjoining Cordilleran thrust belt have provided structural diversity within the Laramide province. Obliquities between convergence directions and the northern and southeastern boundaries of the Laramide province have resulted in transpressive arrays of en echelon folds and arches, not major through-going strike-slip faults.
Cretaceous–Eocene magmatism and Laramide deformation in southwestern Mexico: No role for terrane accretion Available to Purchase
In southwestern Mexico, Late Cretaceous to Early Tertiary deformation has been generally associated with the Laramide orogeny of the Cordillera. Several alternative models consider the deformation to result from the accretion of the Guerrero terrane, formed by the Zihuatanejo, Arcelia, and Teloloapan intraoceanic island arcs, to the continental margin of the North American plate. Here, we present a detailed geologic and structural study and new 40 Ar/ 39 Ar and U-Pb ages for a broad region in the central-eastern part of the Guerrero terrane that allow the accretion model to be tested. In the Huetamo–Ciudad Altamirano part of the region, an almost complete Cretaceous-Paleogene succession records the transition from an early Cretaceous shallow-marine environment to continental conditions that began in Santonian times, followed by the development of a major continental Eocene magmatic arc. Folding of the marine and transitional successions signifies a shortening episode between the late Cenomanian and the Santonian, and a subsequent, out-of-sequence, coaxial refolding event in Maastrichtian-Paleocene time amplified the previous structures. A major left-lateral shear zone postdates the contractional deformation, and it passively controlled the geographic distribution of Eocene silicic volcanism. Minor transcurrent faulting followed. Our results indicate that the Huetamo–Ciudad Altamirano region, which has been considered part of the Zihuatanejo subterrane, was in proximity to a continent during most of the Mesozoic. We found continental recycled material at various stratigraphic levels of the Huetamo Cretaceous succession and Grenvillian inherited ages in zircons from the ca. 120 Ma Placeres del Oro pluton. More importantly, detrital zircon ages from the pre-Cretaceous basement of the Huetamo succession (Tzitzio metaflysch) and the pre–Early Jurassic basement of the Arcelia subterrane (Tejupilco suite) yield very similar Late Permian and Ordovician age peaks. These ages are typical of the Acatlán complex, onto which the Guerrero terrane has been proposed to have been accreted in the Late Cretaceous. Similarly, Paleozoic and Precambrian ages are reported in detrital zircons from the volcano-sedimentary successions of the Zihuatanejo, Arcelia, and Teloloapan subterranes. Models considering this part of the Guerrero terrane as having formed by intraoceanic island arcs separated by one or more subduction zones cannot explain the ubiquitous presence of older continental material in the Mesozoic succession. We favor a model in which most of the Guerrero terrane consisted of autochthonous or parautochthonous units deposited on the thinned continental margin of the North American plate and where the Mesozoic magmatic and sedimentary record is explained in the framework of an enduring west-facing migrating arc and related extensional backarc and forearc basins. The results presented here exclude the accretion of allochthonous terranes as the cause for Laramide deformation and require an alternative driving force to explain the generation of the Late Cretaceous–early Tertiary shortening and shearing on the southern margin of the North American plate.
Geochemical evolution of igneous rocks and changing magma sources during the formation and closure of the Central American land bridge of Panama Available to Purchase
The geological development of Panama’s isthmus resulted from intermittent magmatism and oceanic plate interactions over approximately the past 100 m.y. Geochemical data from ~300 volcanic and intrusive rocks sampled along the Cordillera de Panama document this evolution and are used to place it in a tectonic framework. Three distinct trace-element signatures are recognized in the oldest basement rocks: (1) oceanic basement of the Caribbean large igneous province (CLIP basement) displays flat trace-element patterns, (2) CLIP terranes show enriched ocean-island basalt (OIB) signatures, and (3) CLIP rocks exhibit arc signatures. The Chagres igneous complex represents the oldest evidence of arc magmatism in Panama. These rocks are tholeiitic, and they have enriched but highly variable fluid-mobile element (Cs, Ba, Rb, K, Sr) abundances. Ratios of these large ion lithophile elements LILEs) to immobile trace elements (e.g., Nb, Ta, middle and heavy rare earth elements) have a typical, but variably depleted, arc-type character that was produced by subduction below the CLIP oceanic plateau. These early arc rocks likely comprise much of the upper crust of the Cordillera de Panama and indicate that by 66 Ma, the mantle wedge beneath Panama was chemically distinct (i.e., more depleted) and highly variable in composition compared to the Galapagos mantle material, from which earlier CLIP magmas were derived. Younger Miocene andesites were erupted across the Cordillera de Panama from 20 to 5 Ma, and these display relatively uniform trace-element patterns. High field strength elements (HFSEs) increase from tholeiitic to medium-K arc compositions. The change in mantle sources from CLIP basement to arc magmas indicates that enriched sub-CLIP (i.e., plume) mantle material was no longer present in the mantle wedge by the time that subduction magmatism commenced in the area. Instead, a large spectrum of mantle compositions was present at the onset of arc magmatism, onto which the arc fluid signature was imprinted. Arc maturation led to a more homogeneous mantle wedge, which became progressively less depleted due to mixing or entrainment of less-depleted backarc mantle through time. Normal arc magmatism in the Cordillera de Panama terminated around 5 Ma due to the collision of a series of aseismic ridges with the developing and emergent Panama landmass. Younger heavy rare earth element–depleted magmas (younger than 2 Ma), which still carry a strong arc geochemical signature, were probably produced by ocean-ridge melting after their collision.