Download Brief overview of North American Cordilleran geology by Cin

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Cartographic propaganda wikipedia , lookup

Large igneous province wikipedia , lookup

Great Lakes tectonic zone wikipedia , lookup

Oceanic trench wikipedia , lookup

Algoman orogeny wikipedia , lookup

Geological history of Earth wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Brief overview of North American Cordilleran geology
by Cin‐Ty Lee
Note: make sure to take notes as I will talk or sketch on the board many things that are not presented y
g
p
explicitly in these slides
Topography map of North America
Topography map
Topography map
H d
How does the North American Cordillera fit into a global context?
th N th A
i
C dill
fit i t
l b l
t t?
Dickinson 2004
P‐wave tomography: Seismic structure beneath western USA
Burdick et al. 2008
Crustal provinces of North America (Laurentia)
‐Proterozoic and Archean terranes were already assembled by 1.6 Ga
Hoffman, 1988
Crustal provinces in southwestern USA
Hoffman, 1988
Bennett and DePaolo, 1987
Some examples of tectonic margins for your reference
margins for your reference
Dickinson and Snyder, 1978
1.1 Ga = Rodinia Super‐continent (Grenvillian age)
Neo‐Proterozoic = Rodinia breaks up
“western”
western margin of Laurentia
margin of Laurentia represents a passive margin due to opening of
represents a passive margin due to opening of
the Panthalassan ocean
700‐400 Ma
Western margin of Laurentia
represents a passive margin
Dickinson and Snyder, 1978
400‐250 Ma
Passive margin is interrupted in Devonian times by the accretion of island arcs
Antler and Sonoma orogenies
Antler and Sonoma orogenies
Accretion of allochthonous
terranes to the western margin of the North American craton
f h N hA
i
Antler/Sonoma orogenies result in the accretion of Paleozoic island arc terranes to western North America
Permian
Formation of Pangea
“
“western” margin of North America now dominated by subduction
”
i fN hA
i
d i
db
bd i zone
250‐50
250
50 Ma
Ma
Subduction results in continued accretion of fringing island arcs and the generation of continental magmatic arcs
Sierra Nevada batholith
Sevier and Laramide Orogenies
150‐70 Ma
Sevier orogeny and continental arc magmatism
ti
t l
ti
Thin‐skinned deformation
‐ thrust sheets
One view of convergent g
margin of western North America between 180‐50 My
DeCelles, 2004
Late Cretaceous
Present‐day geologic map yg
g
p
of western North America, showing salient Cretaceous and younger tectonic features
tectonic features
DeCelles, 2004
Cretaceous (Turonian)
Generation of deep basins behind the arc
aka Cretaceous Inland Sea
aka Cretaceous Inland Sea
‐high organic content (black shales, coal)
‐bentonite
b t it (clays formed from ash)
( l
f
df
h)
DeCelles, 2004
Cretaceous (Maastrichtian)
Isopach
p
map
p
back arc basins
DeCelles, 2004
Back arc basins may be related to dynamic topography and flexure
Back arc basins may be related to dynamic topography and flexure
DeCelles, 2004
Taken after Gurnis
Migration of arc magmatic front eastward
~70 Ma Sierran arc magmatism
~70 Ma, Sierran
arc magmatism cuts off, and then sweeps eastward
cuts off and then sweeps eastward
Eastward migration of arc front is thought to be related to flat subduction beginning at ~74 Ma and continuing until ~40 Ma
~74 Ma and continuing until ~40 Ma
Dickinson and Snyder, 1978
Flat subduction results in thick‐skinned compressional deformation
‐ LARAMIDE OROGENY
LARAMIDE OROGENY
‐ basement‐core uplifts
‐ examples of Laramide uplifts include the Rocky Mountains, Colorado Plateau, Wind River Range, Tetons
End result of Laramide orogeny is a thickened crust
Magmatism associated with the Laramide orogeny
‐ Andesitic volcanoes near Yellowstone (the Absaroka Range) are associated with Laramide magmatism
g
At ~30 Ma, compressional
forces along the edge of and beneath North America begin to decrease as the Pacific‐Farallon
as the Pacific
Farallon ridge ridge
approaches the margin.
Flat‐subducting Farallon
plate “rolls” back or l t “ ll ” b k
collapses
Laramide orogeny
g y ends
Thickened North American Cordillera begins to collapse gravitationally
collapse gravitationally Collision of Pacific‐Farallon Ridge with North American trench, terminates subduction and generates a transform fault (the San
generates a transform fault (the San Andreas).
A “slabless” window opens up beneath western USA.
Basin and Range style extension kicks in
kicks in
Late Cenozoic lithosphere extension results in the generation of decompression magmatism in the underlying asthenosphere
Yellowstone hotspot appears (not obviously related to extension; thought to be a plume)
DeCelles, 2004
Geologic summary Dickinson, 2004
Useful Websites
Lava and magma database for western USA
www.navdata.org
Global supercontinent cycles www.scotese.com
San Andreas Fault plate reconstructions (Tanya Atwater)
San
Andreas Fault plate reconstructions (Tanya Atwater)
http://emvc.geol.ucsb.edu/downloads.php