Strike-slip faults form in a wide variety of tectonic settings and are a first-order control on the geometry and sediment accumulation patterns in adjacent sedimentary basins. Although the structural and depositional architecture of strike-slip basins is well documented, few studies of strike-slip basins have integrated depositional age, lithofacies, and provenance control within this context. The Chumstick basin formed in central Washington during a regional phase of dextral, strike-slip faulting and episodic magmatism associated with Paleogene ridge-trench interaction along the North America margin. The basin is bounded and subdivided by major strike-slip faults that were active during deposition of the intra-basinal, non-marine Chumstick Formation. We build on the existing stratigraphy and present new, detailed lithofacies mapping, conglomerate clast counts (N = 16; n = 1429), and sandstone detrital zircon analyses (N = 16; n = 1360) from the Chumstick Formation to document changes in sediment provenance, routing, and deposition. These data allow us to reconstruct regional Eocene paleo-drainage systems of Washington and Oregon and suggest that drainage within the Chumstick basin fed a regional river system that flowed to a forearc or marginal basin on the newly accreted Siletzia terrane. More generally, excellent age control from five interbedded tuffs and high sediment accumulation rates allow us to track the evolving sedimentary system over the Formation’s ca. 4−5 m.y. depositional history. This is the first time lithofacies and provenance variations can be constrained at high temporal resolution (0.5−1.5 m.y. scale) for an ancient strike-slip basin and permits a detailed reconstruction of sediment routing pathways and depositional environments. As a result, we can assess how varying sediment supply and accommodation space affects the depositional architecture during strike-slip basin evolution.
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Research Article|
March 09, 2021
Stratigraphy, age, and provenance of the Eocene Chumstick basin, Washington Cascades; implications for paleogeography, regional tectonics, and development of strike-slip basins
Erin E. Donaghy
;
Erin E. Donaghy
1
Department of Earth, Planetary, and Atmospheric Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907, USA
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Paul J. Umhoefer
;
Paul J. Umhoefer
2
School of Earth Sciences and Sustainability, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona 86011, USA
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Michael P. Eddy
;
Michael P. Eddy
1
Department of Earth, Planetary, and Atmospheric Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907, USA
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Robert B. Miller
;
Robert B. Miller
3
Department of Geology, San Jose State University, San Jose, California 95192, USA
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Taylor LaCasse
Taylor LaCasse
4
Department of Geology, Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota 55057 USA
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GSA Bulletin (2021)
Article history
received:
01 May 2020
rev-recd:
09 Nov 2020
accepted:
04 Jan 2021
first online:
09 Mar 2021
Citation
Erin E. Donaghy, Paul J. Umhoefer, Michael P. Eddy, Robert B. Miller, Taylor LaCasse; Stratigraphy, age, and provenance of the Eocene Chumstick basin, Washington Cascades; implications for paleogeography, regional tectonics, and development of strike-slip basins. GSA Bulletin 2021; doi: https://doi.org/10.1130/B35738.1
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