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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Cook Inlet (1)
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North America
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North American Cordillera (1)
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Pacific Ocean
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North Pacific
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Bering Sea (1)
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United States
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Alaska
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Brooks Range (2)
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Kodiak Island (1)
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Susitna River basin (1)
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Wrangell Mountains (1)
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geochronology methods
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U/Pb (1)
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geologic age
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Cenozoic
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Quaternary (1)
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Tertiary
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Paleogene
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Paleocene (1)
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Mesozoic
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Cretaceous
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Upper Cretaceous
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Kodiak Formation (1)
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igneous rocks
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igneous rocks
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plutonic rocks
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gabbros (2)
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granites (1)
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granodiorites (1)
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ultramafics (2)
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volcanic rocks
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basalts (1)
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ophiolite (2)
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metamorphic rocks
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ophiolite (2)
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Primary terms
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absolute age (1)
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Cenozoic
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Quaternary (1)
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Tertiary
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Paleogene
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Paleocene (1)
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crust (2)
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faults (1)
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geophysical methods (3)
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igneous rocks
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plutonic rocks
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gabbros (2)
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granites (1)
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granodiorites (1)
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ultramafics (2)
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volcanic rocks
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basalts (1)
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inclusions (1)
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intrusions (1)
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Mesozoic
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Cretaceous
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Upper Cretaceous
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Kodiak Formation (1)
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North America
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North American Cordillera (1)
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ocean floors (1)
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orogeny (1)
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Pacific Ocean
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North Pacific
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Bering Sea (1)
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plate tectonics (2)
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structural analysis (1)
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tectonics (2)
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United States
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Alaska
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Brooks Range (2)
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Kodiak Island (1)
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Susitna River basin (1)
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Wrangell Mountains (1)
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Late Oligocene to present contractional structure in and around the Susitna basin, Alaska—Geophysical evidence and geological implications
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.