* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download The role of crustal heterogeneity in controlling vertical coupling
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
The role of crustal heterogeneity in controlling vertical coupling during Laramide shortening and the development of the Caribbean –North America transform boundary in southern Mexico: insights from analogue models MARIANO CERCA1, LUCA FERRARI1, MARCO BONINI2, GIACOMO CORTI3 & PIERO MANETTI4 1 Centro de Geociencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico, Campus Juriquilla, Apartado Postal 1-742, Querétaro 76230, Mexico (e-mail: [email protected], [email protected]) 2 Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Istituto di Geoscienze e Georisorse, Sezione di Firenze, via G. La Pira 4, 50121 Firenze, Italy 3 Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università degli Studi di Pisa, via S. Maria 53, 56126 Pisa, Italy 4 Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Istituto di Geoscienze e Georisorse, via G. Moruzzi 1, 56124 Pisa, Italy Abstract: Analogue models of polyphase deformation involving crustal differences in strength, thickness and density give insights into lateral and vertical strain propagation during Late Cretaceous shortening and Early Tertiary left-lateral shearing related to the early development of the North America– Caribbean plate boundary in southern Mexico. Analogue models reproduce a two-phase deformation characterized by a first stage of compression orthogonal to the plate boundary, simulating deformation induced by the Laramide orogeny, followed by a later stage of left-lateral transpression associated with the transfer of the Chortis block from the North American to the Caribbean plate during the early stage of development of the new plate boundary in Early Tertiary times. Based on detailed structural observations in the Guerrero – Morelos platform and the western part of the Mixteco terrane of southern Mexico, we document that a transpressive regime affected continental red bed sequences of Early Paleocene to Late Eocene, and rotated and refolded Laramide structures during this second phase. Our model ends before the transtensional regime that affected the region, which is marked by a volcanic episode of Late Eocene –Oligocene. This change in the deformation regime records the passage of the NW tip of the Chortis block (North America – Cocos– Caribbean triple junction), when subduction replaced transform faulting along the southern Mexico margin. The models focus on the structures formed around the flanks of a thicker/more rigid crustal block that simulates the rock assemblages of the Palaeozoic orogens of southern Mexico (Mixteco – Oaxaca –Juarez block, MOJB). The comparison of the mechanism of deformation of three different analogue models with the natural prototype explains most of the structures observed around the MOJB. Counterclockwise vertical-axis rotations of pre-existing structures in the western flank of the MOJB observed in the Guerrero – Morelos platform are consistent with the modelled structures. Vertical movements of the modelled MOJB induced by the transpressive regime can explain the Papalutla thrust and the basement upheaval and gravitational sliding of the cover in the Tentzo Ranges observed at the western and northern margins of the MOJB, respectively. The growth and propagation of thrusting controlled by the geometry of the block along the eastern margin also correlates with the Vista Hermosa fault. The propagation of strain to the north increases with higher contrast in strength of the thick block with respect to the adjacent modelled crust. Analogue modelling failed to reproduce all the structural details of southern Mexico and, specifically, the structures observed inside the MOJB. The latter, however, are controlled by pre-existing discontinuities, which are not simulated in the model. As a whole, the results demonstrate that crustal heterogeneity in a developing left-lateral plate boundary zone produces a stronger vertical coupling between ductile and brittle crust and a widening of the deformation zone along the margin of the North America plate in southern Mexico. From: GROCOTT , J., TIKOFF , B., MC CAFFREY , K. J. W. & TAYLOR , G. (eds) 2004. Vertical Coupling and Decoupling in the Lithosphere. Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 227, 117–140. 0305-8719/04/$15 # The Geological Society of London 2004. 118 M. CERCA ET AL. Unlike convergent margins, deformation along transform plate boundaries on continental lithosphere can affect a relatively narrow zone on both sides of the plates (e.g. North Anatolia fault, Polochic–Motagua fault system). However, it can be argued that, during the initial development of a transform boundary, deformation is most commonly accommodated in a wide zone, whereas in a mature stage strain localizes along discrete systems of lithospheric strike-slip faults (e.g. Gordon 1998). The degree of coupling between the upper mantle, the lower crust and the upper crust ultimately controls the width of the deformation zone at the early stage of development of the boundary. Furthermore, the presence of crustal blocks with different thicknesses and strengths is likely to alter the coupling and to control the transmission of deformation toward more internal zones of the plates. The development of the North America – Caribbean plate boundary in the Early Tertiary can help to elucidate the importance of crustal heterogeneity during the early development of a transform boundary. It has been suggested that the Chortis block of Central America was an integral part of the North America plate from Jurassic to Late Cretaceous times (Meschede & Frisch 1998, and references therein). At the end of Late Cretaceous, the Chortis block began to detach from North America and to move eastward with the Caribbean plate, likely as a consequence of a reorientation from normal to oblique subduction of the Farallon plate (Herrmann et al. 1994; Meschede et al. 1996). As a result, the continental margin of southern Mexico was truncated (Riller et al. 1992; Herrmann et al. 1994; Schaaf et al. 1995) and middle to lower crustal rocks (Xolapa complex) were exhumed along a 60 km wide band to the north of new plate boundary (Morán-Zenteno et al. 1996). Non-coaxial deformation and migmatization were inferred to have developed in the Xolapa complex between 70 and 46 Ma (Herrmann et al. 1994; Meschede et al. 1996) or in Early Cretaceous (Morán-Zenteno 1992; Ducea et al. 2003). Mylonitic zones developed in a general left-lateral transtensional regime are observed bounding middle to lower crustal rocks of the Xolapa complex to the north (Fig. 1). Vertical propagation of strain in the upper crust and horizontal transmission to the north of the shear zone that bounds the Xolapa complex are not well understood. Meschede et al. (1996) used inversion of brittle microstructures Fig. 1. Terrane boundaries (thick dashed grey lines) and major structural features of southern Mexico (modified after Campa & Coney 1983; Sedlock et al. 1993). TMVB, trans-Mexican volcanic belt. Terranes: G, Guerrero; M, Mixteco; O, Oaxaca; J, Juarez; Ma, Maya; and X, Xolapa. GMP, Cretaceous Guerrero–Morelos platform. Structures: (1) Teloloapan– Ixtapan de la Sal thrust; (2) Zitlala–Cuernavaca thrust; (3) refolded and rotated Laramide folds; (4) Papalutla thrust; (5) Tentzo Ranges arcuate folds; (6) Oaxaca fault; and (7) Vista Hermosa thrust. Along the northern boundary of the Xolapa terrane, several mylonitic zones (Mz) crop out in the Tierra Colorada shear zone (TC), and Chacalapa fault (Ch). Black dashed lines show the approximate boundaries of the Mixteco–Oaxaca–Juarez block (MOJB) and black solid lines mark thrust boundaries. COUPLING DURING LARAMIDE SHORTENING measured in a wide area of southern Mexico to claim that the stress applied at the plate boundary has been transmitted to the north of the Xolapa complex into the Mixteco and Oaxaca terranes (Fig. 2). They grouped structures in Palaeozoic to Early Tertiary rocks inferred to have developed between 70 and 40 Ma in a unique event characterized by subhorizontal s1 and s3, i.e. a left-lateral strike-slip regime of deformation. Recently, however, we have documented a more complex deformation history. Detailed field studies in the Guerrero –Morelos platform and the eastern part of the Mixteco terrane (Fig. 1) show that a major episode of east–west 119 shortening between 88 and 67 Ma (Laramide orogeny) was followed by Early Tertiary leftlateral transpression that affected an area up to 250 km to the north of the modern plate boundary (Cerca & Ferrari 2001). Starting from Latest Eocene, transpression was replaced by transtension, which triggered widespread silicic volcanism (Morán-Zenteno et al. 1999; AlanizAlvarez et al. 2002). The Early Tertiary transpression was particularly diffuse at the boundary and in the eastern part of the Mixteco–Oaxaca – Juarez block (MOJB), a thicker and more rigid crustal block, suggesting that it controlled the widening of the deformation zone related to the Fig. 2. Sketch map showing the main lithological units of southern Mexico (modified after Ortega-Gutiérrez et al. 1992; Consejo de Recursos Minerales 2001). GC, Guichicovi complex. Solid lines indicate major fault zones. Q9 120 M. CERCA ET AL. development of the Caribbean –North America plate boundary. In this Chapter we approach the study of deformational features around the MOJB indirectly, by performing analogue models designed to investigate the space–time propagation of deformation in relation to crustal rheological heterogeneities during polyphase deformation simulating the tectonic evolution of the southern Mexico deformed margin. Geological and tectonic setting Crustal structure of southern Mexico and the Mixteco –Oaxaca – Juarez block Geologically, Mexico south of the trans-Mexican volcanic belt (TMVB) consists of a heterogeneous mosaic of crustal blocks (Fig. 1) that have been traditionally classified using the tectonostratigraphic terrane analysis (Campa & Coney 1983; Sedlock et al. 1993). Owing to their differing geological histories, these crustal blocks or terranes have distinct thicknesses and rheologies that must be considered in any deformation modelling. The Mixteco and Oaxaca terranes are considered to have the oldest basement in southern Mexico. These terranes are mainly composed of Precambrian or Palaeozoic metamorphic rocks, and a Jurassic to Early Tertiary sedimentary and volcanic cover (Campa & Coney 1983; Sedlock et al. 1993). The Mixteco terrane records a Late Ordovician– Early Silurian continental collisional event (Acatecan orogeny) related to the closure of the Iapetus Ocean (Ortega-Gutiérrez et al. 1999) and was later sutured to the Grenvillian Oaxaca terrane in the Early Permian (Elı́as-Herrera & Ortega-Gutiérrez 2002). The basement of the Juarez terrane is poorly known, but recent studies suggest that it could be also pre-Mesozoic. The boundary between the Oaxaca terrane and the Juarez terrane is the north–south-trending Sierra de Juarez mylonitic complex, which records right-lateral movements related to the southward movement of the Yucatan block and the opening of the Gulf of Mexico in Mid-Jurassic times (Alaniz-Alvarez et al. 1996) (Fig. 1). It has also been suggested that the Juarez terrane was the site of a rifting in Jurassic times (Sedlock et al. 1993, and references therein). However, Jurassic volcanism is very limited and recently published regional maps show a wide area of Palaeozoic metamorphic rocks in the core of the Juarez terrane (Consejo de Recursos Minerales 1998, 2001). In addition, the protolith of the Sierra de Juarez mylonites is, at least in part, the Grenvillian Oaxaca terrane (Alaniz-Alvarez et al. 1996), and Grenvillian rocks have been reported in the Guichicovi complex SW of the Juarez terrane (Murillo et al. 1992; Weber & Köhler 1999) (Fig. 2), which suggests a lateral continuity of the rocks in between. This seems to be confirmed by a magnetotelluric study crossing the Oaxaca and Juarez terranes, which indicates that they could share a similar basement at depth (Jording et al. 2000). The eastern boundary of the Juarez terrane is the Vista Hermosa fault zone (Ortega-Gutiérrez et al. 1990), east of which is the transitional crust of the Maya terrane thinned during the opening of the Gulf of Mexico (Fig. 1). Given its geological characteristics, we consider that the block (MOJB) formed by the Mixteco, Oaxaca and Juarez terranes presents a more rigid basement and a thicker crust than the surrounding regions. To the west of this block, Mesozoic island arc assemblages and Cretaceous marine carbonates crop out extensively (Guerrero terrane and Guerrero–Morelos platform, Figs 1 & 2) and the crust is relatively thinner. The western limit of the block corresponds to the contact between the deformed and metamorphosed basement (Acatlán complex) of the Mixteco terrane and the Cretaceous carbonate sequences of the Guerrero –Morelos platform. Finally, further geometrical constraints are provided by the presence of a semiarc-shaped fold-and-thrust belt that surrounds and follows approximately the border of the MOJB (Figs 1 & 2). Available geophysical data indicate that the crustal thickness decreases from 45 km in the central part of the MOJB to 28 km north of Zihuatanejo and to 25 km in the Tehuantepec Isthmus zone (Campos-Enriquez & SanchezZamora 2000; Valdéz et al. 1986; UrrutiaFucugauchi & Flores-Ruiz 1996; Garcı́a-Pérez & Urrutia-Fucugauchi 1997). Thinning or absence of the Late Cretaceous carbonate sequences in the Mixteco, Oaxaca and Juarez terranes indicates that the MOJB was at least partially emergent and represented a major heterogeneity of the southern Mexico crust with well-developed boundaries by Late Cretaceous times (Fig. 3). Laramide deformation After earlier deformation phases, southern Mexico was affected in Late Cretaceous time by contractional deformation during the Laramide orogeny (Lang et al. 1996; Bird 1998; Cabral-Cano et al. 2000a). The migration of deformation towards the continent has been associated to low-angle and high-velocity subduction in the western margin of COUPLING DURING LARAMIDE SHORTENING 121 Fig. 3. (a) Digital elevation model of the southern Mexico continental margin and (b) idealized longitudinal section. Analogue models were designed to investigate the influence of a rigid block in the brittle crust. In the models the section was simplified assuming a stratified two-layer and uniformly thick crust. the North America plate (Bunge & Grand 2000). The onset of the Laramide deformation in southern Mexico has been constrained by the deposition of the Mezcala flysch, which records a sudden change from carbonaceous to terrigenous sedimentation and represents the youngest deformed unit. This transition is set at the Cenomanian–Turonian boundary (c. 93 Ma) (Hernández-Romano et al. 1997) or at the Turonian–Coniacian boundary (c. 89 Ma) (Lang & Frerichs 1998). Almost all authors agree in placing the end of the Laramide episode in the Paleocene in view of time constraints north of the TMVB (Salinas-Prieto et al. 2000, and references therein). However, volcanic and plutonic rocks of 67–62 Ma unaffected by Laramide-style deformation suggest a Maastrichtian age at least in the Guerrero–Morelos platform area (OrtegaGutiérrez 1980; Meza-Figueroa et al. 2001). The Laramide orogeny produced regional ENE-directed shortening that presumably amalgamated and stacked the volcanic arcs and sedimentary successions of the Guerrero terrane onto an attenuated continental crust (Cabral-Cano et al. 2000a, b). The result of the shortening is manifested in a wide north –south-striking fold-and-thrust belt with vergence towards the ENE. According to Salinas-Prieto et al. (2000), progressive shortening caused a second ductile deformation with opposite vergence (backthrusting) of structures. Early Tertiary deformation The rock sequences recording the time interval between Maastrichtian and Late Eocene in the study area consist mainly of continental sedimentary deposits and minor volcanic rocks (e.g. Tetelcingo, Balsas, Oapan and other locally named formations) that fill basins bounded by north–south folds and thrusts formed during previous eastward shortening. Until recently, shortening structures of contrasting style affecting these Early Tertiary sequences have been attributed to the Laramide deformation. Complex patterns of shortening and associated strike-slip faults have been observed widely in these sequences north of the shear zone bounding the Xolapa complex. In particular, deformation decreasing gradually upwards can be observed in the continental deposits of the Balsas and Tetelcingo formations on the western flank of the MOJB (Fries 1960; De Cserna et al. 1980; Ortega-Gutiérrez 1980) (Fig. 4). The most notable example is a wide deformation band 122 M. CERCA ET AL. Fig. 4. Simplified geology of the western margin of the MOJB (Mixteco terrane) and Guerrero–Morelos platform and location of the Early Tertiary basins deformed. (60 km) in front of the NE–SW-trending Papalutla thrust that affects Tertiary volcanosedimentary deposits of the Copalillo and Tuzantlan basins (Fig. 4). Deformation, characterized by NW-directed shortening and NW–SE strikeslip faults, is more intense near the Papalutla fault (Cerca & Ferrari 2001). This structure dips to the east and along 9 km of its length thrusts Palaeozoic rocks of the Mixteco terrane on top of the Cretaceous sedimentary succession of the Guerrero–Morelos platform. Models that characterize Laramide deformation by eastverging thrusting of the Late Cretaceous sequences (Campa 1978; Campa & Coney 1983; Salinas-Prieto et al. 2000) fail to explain the geometry of this fault. On the other hand, our recognition of a deformation consistent with the geometry of the Papalutla fault in the Copalillo and Tuzantlan continental deposits (Figs 4 & 5) suggests that it moved during the Early Tertiary, although previous movements are not discarded. In the middle of the Guerrero –Morelos platform, where the thickness of the sequences in the Balsas basin reaches c. 500 m, deformation characterized by a large NW– SE fold and the absence of normal faults is worth nothing. The intensity of folding decreases towards the top of the sequence (Fig. 5a –c). Towards the southern part of the Guerrero – Morelos platform, deformation is characterized by asymmetric NW –SE synclinorium-type structures (Chilpancingo basin) and NW –SE strike-slip faults (Fig. 4). Near the boundary with the Xolapa complex, the Late Cretaceous carbonates are refolded and aligned with east – west-trending folds with vertical hinge lines (Fig. 5d). In this area, large outcrops of carbonate COUPLING DURING LARAMIDE SHORTENING 123 Fig. 5. (a) Panoramic view to the NE of the Balsas sequence in the central Guerrero–Morelos platform showing change in the inclination of layers. (b) From bottom to top, Maastrichtian Tetelcingo, Paleocene Balsas and Oapan formations, the sequence is covered by undeformed Oligocene volcanic rocks. (c) Deformation of a volcano-sedimentary sequence in the Tertiary basins in front of the Papalutla thrust. (d) View to the west in the Mexico–Acapulco highway showing Cretaceous limestone of Paleocene. (e) Vertical bedding of Paleocene conglomerate within a tight fold in the Yanhuitlan sequence. breccias adjacent to the mylonites and underlying the Early Tertiary sequences are evidence of the rupture and detachment of the Chortis block (Mills 1998). Within the MOJB, localized folding associated with strike-slip movements of the same age has been observed in the Yanhuitlan area (Fig. 5e). Other structures (mostly strike-slip faults and minor folds) within and east of the MOJB have suspected Paleocene to Eocene age and affect the plate margin in an area of variable width to the north of the shear zone bounding the Xolapa complex. 124 M. CERCA ET AL. Tertiary deformation All the above evidence indicates that, in the Guerrero–Morelos platform and the western part of the MOJB, deformation during Early Tertiary times was distinct from the Late Cretaceous Laramide shortening and was essentially transpressional. Constraining Laramide shortening between the time interval from 88 to 67 Ma implies that in southern Mexico it commenced earlier and continued for a shorter time than in the north (75–40 Ma; Bird 1998, and references therein). This difference suggests that a change in the tectonic setting of southern Mexico occurred during the Late Maastrichtian–Early Paleocene interval. There is ample evidence that an ESE left-lateral strike-slip regime over a broad zone dominated the Cenozoic tectonics of the MOJB. This regime has been related to the detachment of the Chortis block from North America and its transfer to the eastward-moving Caribbean plate. This process is likely to have begun at the end of the Late Cretaceous as a consequence of changes in the angles of convergence and subduction between the Farallon and North America plates (Engebretson et al. 1985; Ratschbacher et al. 1991; Herrmann et al. 1994; Meschede et al. 1996). A second important change occurred when the northwestern tip of the Chortis block and the trench–trench–transform triple junction passed along the coast of southern Mexico. According to the model of Morán-Zenteno et al. (1996), the uplift of the continental margin and the exhumation of the middle crustal rocks of the Xolapa complex followed the passage of the triple junction. Uplift and exhumation were accomplished through the development of the mylonitic zone bounding the Xolapa complex to the north. Available isotopic ages and crosscutting relationships between plutons and the mylonitic zones also indicate that magmatism was active just before and after the triple junction passage (Schaaf et al. 1995; Morán-Zenteno et al. 1999). In the area of the Guerrero– Morelos platform, the triple junction passage is well documented by a widespread Late Eocene –Early Oligocene (36–30 Ma) volcanic episode (Morán-Zenteno et al. 1999, and references therein; Cerca et al. 2003). In the northern part of the Guerrero – Morelos platform, this last volcanic episode has been associated with a transtensional regime (Alaniz-Alvarez et al. 2002). Post-Eocene transcurrent and transtensional deformation is widespread also to the east. Indeed, Meschede et al. (1996) obtained a strike-slip palaeotensor from faults in volcanic rocks at Chilapa (their site CHI2-S) that we dated at 32.7 Ma (Cerca et al. 2003), and a transtensional palaeotensor by inversion from faults in the Etla tuff (site ETVS2) dated at 17 Ma (Urrutia-Fucugauchi & Ferrusquı́a-Villafranca 2001). Summarizing all the above information, we propose that the Early Tertiary strain (65–36 Ma) constituted a phase of deformation different from the Late Cretaceous Laramide shortening and the post-Eocene transtension. This deformation is represented overall by localized tectonic dragging effects and small counterclockwise rotations about the vertical axis of previously formed structures and semi-rigid crustal blocks. Consistent counterclockwise rotation of Laramide structures and Early Tertiary sequences (Balsas formation) has also been found in palaeomagnetic studies (Molina-Garza et al. 2003, and references therein). We propose that a transpressive regime also affected the study region during these times based on the following considerations: (a) consistent folding and strikeslip faults are observed in the Early Tertiary red bed sequences that record the time interval between the Early Paleocene and the Late Eocene, this deformation decreasing gradually to the top of the sequence; (b) there is a remarkable absence of major normal faults affecting these sequences; and (c) north–south-trending, vertical hinges of Laramide folds are refolded as a consequence of the strike-slip of lower crust rocks. In this context we hypothesize that this heterogeneous Early Tertiary deformation can be ascribed to a general left-lateral strike-slip regime at the early stages of the Chortis block transfer to the Caribbean plate (Fig. 6). As mentioned above, this deformation regime was triggered by changes in convergence direction and subduction angles between the Farallon and North America plates. Crustal strain was distributed in a wide area along the developing transform plate boundary. The presence of the thicker and more rigid MOJB caused an inland propagation of deformation within a transpressional regime. This deformation decreased gradually as it was accommodated heterogeneously by rotation of structures and newly formed discrete shear zones. With the passage of the trench–trench–transform triple junction in the Late Eocene–Oligocene, the transform boundary was replaced by subduction. This represents a free boundary that triggered transtension inside the continental margin. Analogue modelling of the Late Cretaceous and Early Tertiary deformation Model construction Experiments were performed at the Tectonic and Geomorphic Processes Modelling Laboratory of COUPLING DURING LARAMIDE SHORTENING 125 Fig. 6. Cartoon showing the hypothetical model of the deformation phases. (a) Laramide deformation during the Late Cretaceous caused a wide fold-and-thrust belt. (b) During Early Tertiary transpression, new structures form around the MOJB, counterclockwise rotation and Laramide structures are refolded, rotation reaches c. 158. Nomenclature as in Figure 1, plus Yu, Yucatan block. The position of the later exhumed Xolapa terrane is indicated (X). Arrows indicate approximate vector of convergence between Farallon and North America plates, after Engebretson et al. (1985), Meschede & Frisch (1998) and Bunge & Grand (2000). the CNR-IGG at the University of Florence, Italy, and were built in a ‘squeeze box’ type apparatus (Fig. 7). The apparatus consists of a metallic table with a fixed wall on one side. On the opposite side there is a parallel wall that is allowed to move in different directions. Displacement of this moving wall, which is produced by electric motors and controlled (in terms of direction and velocity) by a central unit, allows simulation of normal and oblique extension, orthogonal to transpressive contraction and strike-slip deformation. Models, with dimensions of 40 cm length, 39 cm width and 1.55 cm average thickness, were built on the metallic table of the experimental apparatus, between the fixed and moving walls (Figs 7 & 8a). Experiments were designed to reproduce a two-phase convergence: a first phase of orthogonal compression followed by a later stage of shortening with a lateral component in a NE direction. In order to obtain orthogonal convergence during the first phase, the moving wall of the experimental apparatus was modified by fixing an orthogonal short metallic wall at one of its extremities and producing an L-shaped wall that was allowed to move in a parallel direction with respect to the fixed wall. In this setting, the short metallic wall produced orthogonal compression of the models, with a direction of shortening that was parallel to the fixed metallic wall. The models were shortened by 42 mm (11% bulk shortening) at a velocity of 6 mm h21 during this phase. During the second phase, the short metallic wall was removed and the 126 M. CERCA ET AL. Fig. 7. Motorized analogue modelling apparatus used to perform the experiments. moving wall was displaced in such a way as to create transpression at an angle of 158 with respect to the fixed wall. Models were shortened by 72 mm (17% bulk oblique shortening) at a velocity of 15 mm h21 during this second phase. Three representative models are discussed in detail in this work (see Table 1). Photographs were taken at regular time intervals with vertical and lateral illumination to observe the development and propagation of the structures. At the end of each experiment, models were covered by white sand to preserve the final topography and subsequently soaked in water to allow nondisturbed cuts of longitudinal sections. Model rheological structure and analogue materials We constructed models that were designed to simulate a simplified two-layer vertical rheology: a brittle upper crust and a lower ductile crust (Fig. 8c & f). A parallelepiped-shaped built-in block representing the rigid block was constructed in one side of the models, adjacent to the moving wall (Fig. 8b). The parallelepiped was 25 cm long and 15 cm wide. The right and left external sides of the parallelepiped had angles of 458 and 358 with respect to the moving wall. The thickness of the brittle material was 7.5 mm, but increased to 11.5 mm within the rigid block. Dry quartz sand with well-rounded and uniform size grains (0.24 mm) was used to model the brittle behaviour of the upper crust. Quartz sand has a mean density of 1400 kg m23 and insignificant cohesion (70 Pa). Layers of coloured sand were sieved and sedimented as passive markers to highlight deformation in the longitudinal sections. In models Chortis 02 and 03, the rigid block was simulated by thickness variation of the sand layer in order to create lateral strength heterogeneity. In model Chortis 04, the rigid block was simulated by using humid plastic clay to enhance the strength contrast between the block and ‘normal crust’ and to exaggerate its influence on the model deformation pattern. Plastic clay has a mean density of 2500 kg m23 and unscaled high cohesion compared with the sand. A rough estimation of the clay cohesion using a shear vane tester yielded values ranging between c. 37 and 59 kPa. Model Chortis 03 was varied slightly from model Chortis 02 by lubricating the metallic table with Vaseline oil in order to reduce basal friction. To simulate the ductile behaviour of the lower crust, a homogeneous mixture of silicone polymer (Mastic Silicon Rebondissant No. 29 provided by CRC Industries, France) and sand (with a silicon: sand ratio of 5:5.5 by weight) has been utilized. The mixture has a red colour, a density ranging from 1450 to 1500 kg m23, and a dynamic shear viscosity h ¼ 3 105 Pa (determined at 218C using a coni-cylindrical viscometer). COUPLING DURING LARAMIDE SHORTENING 127 Fig. 8. Construction of the model: (a) 3D view; (b) map view; and (c) longitudinal section of models Chortis 02 and 03 and location of profiles. Strength profiles: (d) the modelled crust, (e) the modelled block constructed with sand, (f) longitudinal section of model Chortis 04, and (g) the modelled block constructed with clay. This material exhibits Newtonian behaviour at low strain rates such as those occurring in the experiments (,1023 s21). After construction, a grid of sand over the model surface served as a passive strain marker for the map views. The initial strength profiles of the models for maximum values of strain rate (1̇ 1023 s21) produced in the second phase are presented in Figure 8d, e and g. The properties of the materials used and a comparison with the natural properties are summarized in Table 2. Scaling of models Scaling of a model is based on the kinematics, dynamics and geometrical similarities between the model and the natural prototype (Hubbert 1937; Ramberg 1981). Models were designed specifically to simulate the two phases of deformation that affected the south of Mexico. Thus, simplified geometry and boundary conditions were reproduced using all the geological, structural, geochronological, and geophysical information available for southern Mexico. 128 M. CERCA ET AL. Table 1. Characteristics of the three experiments Chortis 02 Material used for the thicker block Cohesion contrast of the block with respect to the adjacent upper crust Lubrication at the base of model Nature of initial boundary between thicker block and lower crust Chortis 03 Chortis 04 Sand No Sand No Humid clay High No Vertical Vaseline oil Vertical No Vertical shear viscosity of the silicon–sand mixture of 3 105 Pa s, then h ¼ 3 10217 and 1̇ ¼ 8.5 109. The horizontal displacement velocity can be calculated from v ¼ vmodel/vnature ¼ 1̇ l , giving v ¼ 4250. In the first phase of deformation, experiments represented ENE progressive Laramide shortening active during the interval from Turonian to Maastrichtian –Earliest Paleocene. Actual peak velocities computed for the Colorado Plateau in the Laramide orogeny of the Rocky Mountains are 1.5 mm a21 (Bird 1998). However, in the Rocky Mountains the Laramide orogeny occurred within a continental plate, not involving large deformations or displacements and in a different period of time from 75 to 35 Ma (Bird 1998). In southern Mexico, the Laramide is a progressive deformation directed to the east that affects a wide area and crustal blocks of diverse composition (Salinas-Prieto et al. 2000; Cabral-Cano et al. 2000b). Laramide shortening in southern Mexico was estimated at approximately 60 km on a balanced section in the eastern Guerrero terrane (Lang et al. 1996) and Models were properly scaled to Nature in such a way that 1 cm in the model is equivalent to 20 km in Nature and geometric similarity l ¼ lmodel/lnature ¼ 5 1027. In the same way, the normal stress ratio between the model and Nature must be scaled with the general stress reduction equation s ¼ smodel/snature ¼ r g l , where the asterisks represent the ratio of the variable in the model and in Nature. This equation can be reduced to s ¼ r l , because tests on the models were conducted under normal gravity conditions, g ¼ 1. The mean value of density in the brittle upper crust is approximately 2750 kg cm23, and the ratio r ¼ 0.51, so the density ratio between brittle and ductile crust (BC/DC) is approximately 0.95. With these values, a stress ratio of s ¼ 2.55 1027 between model and Nature has been calculated. In ductile materials, viscous forces are related to dynamic shear viscosity and strain rate by s ¼ 1̇ h or 1̇ ¼ s /h . Assuming a reasonable value for the dynamic shear viscosity of the Q1 lower crust of 1021 to 1023 Pa s (Corti et al. 2002; Willner et al. 2002), and for the dynamic Table 2. Model and natural parameters used in experiments Parameter Density, BC (kg cm23) Cohesion, BC (kPa) Coefficient of friction, BC, m Density, DC (kg cm23) Viscosity, DC, n (Pa s) Gravity, g (m s22) Length, l (m) Stress, s (Pa) Strain rate, 1̇ (s21) Time, 1st phase, t (s) Time, 2nd phase, t (s) Velocity of displacement, 1st phase, v (m s21) Velocity of displacement, 2nd phase, v (m s21) Chortis 02 and 03 Chortis 04 clay block Nature Model/nature ratio (referred to models Chortis 02 and 03) 1400 insignificant 0.7002 1450 3 105 9.81 0.01 2500 37–59† 0.51 9.81 0.01 2750 6 107 0.6 – 0.85 2900 1021 –1023 9.81 20000 2.82 104 1.72 104 1.67 1026 2.3 10214 6.62 1014 8.19 1014 3.93 10210 0.5 3 10217 1 5 1027 2.55 1027 8.5 109 3.80 10211 2.11 10211 4.25 103 4.17 1026 9.83 10210 4.25 103 2 1024 2.82 104 1.72 104 1.67 1026 (6 mm h21) 4.17 1026 (15 mm h21) BC, brittle crust (sand); DC, ductile crust (silicon – sand mixture). Estimated at 24% water content with a vane tester. † COUPLING DURING LARAMIDE SHORTENING available age constraints indicate that it occurred in about 20 Ma. Using these values we obtain a rough estimation of velocity of 3 mm a21, twice the velocity in the Rocky Mountains, and vmodel of 1.5 mm h21. In order to carry out the models in a convenient experimental time, we assumed a vmodel ¼ 6 mm h21. With this setup the experimental time decreased without a significant change in the resulting structural pattern. The second phase of deformation simulated the left-lateral transpressive regime affecting the area between the Early Paleocene and Late Eocene. Meschede & Frisch (1998) estimated over 1000 km of displacement of the Chortis block during the Palaeogene. Previous studies calculated deformation velocities between 54 and 56 mm a21 (Herrmann et al. 1994; Schaaf et al. 1995) assuming a narrow plate boundary where strain is accommodated in localized shear zones. However, in a diffuse plate boundary, velocities can decrease considerably because strain is accommodated in a wide area (Gordon 1998). Furthermore, the rheological heterogeneities and mechanical anisotropy of the continental margin play an important role in the propagation and partitioning of deformation during orogenic events (Vauchez et al. 1998). With these values, a reasonable deformation velocity of approximately 32 mm a21 was assumed and a model velocity of 15 mm h21 in an ENE direction was computed. Model results Evolution of deformation during the first phase Map views and line drawings showing the evolution of deformation during the first phase of deformation are presented in Figure 9. At 3% bulk shortening (3% b.s. ¼ 12 mm), the initial model deformation is manifested at the surface as north –south-striking thrusts, with vergence toward the foreland, developed at about 3.5 to 4 cm in front of the moving wall (Fig. 9b, & j). At 9% b.s., a second thrust was created 4 cm in front of the first structure in the models Chortis 02 and Chortis 04 (Fig. 9c & k). In the model Chortis 03, the second thrust with the same vergence was formed earlier at about 4.5% b.s., 4 cm in front of the first structure. In this model, at 9% b.s. several discontinuous folds and a thrust formed between the two main structures, up to 3 cm in front of them (Fig. 9g). The models show differences in the deformation at the end of the first deformation phase, at 10.5% b.s. A third thrust with a regular interval of 4 cm was formed in front of the second structure in the model Chortis 02 (Fig. 9d). This structure followed the shape of 129 the rigid block without affecting it significantly. In the models Chortis 03 and Chortis 04, increasing displacements along the existing structures were registered (Fig. 9h & l) but no new structures were formed. A general characteristic of the deformation during the first phase is the periodic growth of the main thrusts with a spacing of 3.5–4 cm. The model Chortis 03 also developed small backthrusts, likely as a consequence of decreasing the friction by lubricating the base with Vaseline oil. It is important to note that, due to the model design during the first phase, the movement of the wall adjacent to the rigid block caused a small boundary effect that was reflected by the slight distortion of the passive mark lines and eastward dragging of the south tip of the thrust faults in the three models. This boundary effect, however, did not affect the model results significantly. Evolution of deformation in the second phase Figure 10 portrays the model evolution during the second phase of deformation (left-lateral transpression). In this case the bulk oblique shortening (b.o.s.) is calculated as the percentage of the moving wall displacement with respect to the resulting length of the model in the same direction (414 mm). In the models Chortis 02 and Chortis 03, during the first 5.8% b.o.s. (24 mm), the transpressional deformation was accommodated by a major left reverse-slip fault orthogonal to the first phase structures and parallel to the moving wall. Minor faults and folds formed north and south of the main thrust, with an angle of 458 to the trend of this structure and a length of 2 cm (Fig. 10b & c). Pre-existing thrust faults formed during the first deformation phase started to rotate counterclockwise close to the moving wall during transpression; a similar rotation pattern characterized the passive markers on the model surface. Notably during the second phase, deformation at the eastern side of the block caused the development of a forelandverging thrust that progressively propagated to the NW following the block boundaries. In the case of model Chortis 04, the clay block behaved as a rigid indenter in which the deformation was controlled by the high strength contrast with respect to the adjacent thinner brittle crust. No structures formed within the block and the deformation propagated at the block boundaries with a higher velocity; at 3% b.o.s., all the structures showed in Figure 10j were already formed. Around the block, thrusts formed both at the clay –sand boundary and at 130 M. CERCA ET AL. Fig. 9. Surface-view evolution of structures in the two phases presented in the form of a schematic table in Figures 4 and 5. The three experiments are presented in columns and consecutive east-directed shortening are presented in lines. The shaded area in line drawings corresponds to the modelled thicker crustal block. Symbols of structures as in Figure 4. 2 cm in front of the rigid block. At the western side of the block, both these thrust sets showed a vergence towards the hinterland, whereas the thrusts at the eastern side were characterized by a double vergence. At 5.8% b.o.s., the rigid block had moved approximately 1 cm to the NE, as indicated by distortion of the passive grid (Fig. 10j). COUPLING DURING LARAMIDE SHORTENING Fig. 10. Surface-view evolution of structures during the second phase of oblique shortening. 131 132 M. CERCA ET AL. Progressive transpression in models Chortis 02 and Chortis 03 was expressed by the continued movement on the main left reverse-slip fault and by further rotation of pre-existing structures (Fig. 10c & g). This rotation also affected the oblique faults and folds of the second phase of deformation and progressively reduced their angle to the main fault until they became aligned with its trace. Slight distortion of the passive markers and offset of the main fault suggest a small counterclockwise rotation of the rigid block. In model Chortis 04, the most important effect during this deformation interval was that movement of the rigid block a further 1 cm to the NE caused left-lateral strike-slip structures to form. Distortion of the passive grid indicated a small clockwise rotation of the block that induced the development of an extensional basin at the west side of the block (Fig. 10k). At the end of the experiments (17.4% b.s., 72 mm of compression), the thrusts developed in models Chortis 02 and 03 at the eastern margin of the rigid block have propagated toward the NE and reached the northern part of the block; distortion of the passive markers indicates also right-lateral strike-slip faults along this margin (Fig. 10d & h). In model Chortis 04, the total displacement of the rigid block to the NE was 3 cm and the clockwise rotation reached 98. A part of the block close to the moving wall was slightly uplifted and the basin in the west side of the block doubled its area. Counterclockwise rotation of the first phase thrusts was also evident on this side of the block at the end of the experiment. Longitudinal sections Ten longitudinal cross-sections representative of the final stage of model deformation are shown in Figure 11a, c and i. These sections highlight the different influence of the two phases of deformation in different parts of the model, defining three distinct regions: (1) a zone extending northward beyond the rigid block, affected only by the first phase of deformation (Fig. 11b, f & j); (2) a zone corresponding to the northern part of the block affected by structures belonging to both the two phases of deformation (Fig. 11c, g & l); and (3) a southern zone close to the contact between the rigid block and the second phase moving wall characterized by structures formed mainly during the second phase of deformation (Fig. 11d, h & m). In zone 1, shortening resulted in the development of thrusts and box-type folds; thrusts with a prevailing vergence to the foreland, propagated up to 9 cm in front of the moving wall (Fig. 11b, f & j). Because of the high strength contrast related to the presence of the rigid block, deformation propagated for only a short distance in front of the moving wall in zones 2 and 3. Zone 2, corresponding to the northern part of the block, displays thrusts with opposing vergence. In the western side of the block, thrust faults related to the fold-and-thrust belt are characterized by vergence to the foreland; conversely, thrusts in the eastern side of the block show a vergence toward the moving wall (Fig. 11c, g & l). These latter structures are formed during the second phase of deformation. In zone 3, cross-sections display structures formed mainly during the second phase of deformation (Fig. 11d, h & m). Longitudinal sections of model Chortis 04 (Fig. 11k) show how the clay block acted as a rigid indenter causing high-angle reverse faults with vergence towards the block and crust uplift at its boundaries. The block remained undeformed as shown in all three sections (Fig. 11d, h & m). Summary of results The general structural pattern that resulted from the progressive deformation of the models is presented schematically in Figure 12. During the first phase, a fold-and-thrust belt with a dominant vergence towards the foreland formed parallel to the moving wall. Apart from model Chortis 04, the second phase deformation was mainly accommodated by the formation of a left reverse-slip fault orthogonal to the trend of the first phase faults, and by lateral translation and rotation of the rigid block. The higher cohesion of the clay block in model Chortis 04 prevented internal deformation and caused indentation in the adjacent crust. In all the experiments, a second system of thrusts nucleated at the eastern margin of the thicker crustal block and then propagated northwestward in domain I (Fig. 12). With increasing deformation, a second fault system was observed in the west side of the rigid block, domain II. Vertical-axis counterclockwise rotation of structures was observed in all three models in the interference zone between the two phases of deformation. Additionally, the clay block in model Chortis 04 rotated clockwise during progressive deformation; this rotation determined the development of an extensional basin and NE-striking left-lateral faults in domain II. Qualitative comparison of model results with the geology Limitations of modelling Many natural parameters concerning the rheology and the boundary conditions of the COUPLING DURING LARAMIDE SHORTENING Fig. 11. Photographs of longitudinal sections. 133 134 M. CERCA ET AL. Fig. 12. Simplified map of resulting domains of deformation. Arrows indicate the direction of convergence. deformation process under investigation are not easy to obtain and frequently data in the literature are scarce, as is the case in southern Mexico. As a consequence, analogue modelling necessarily simplifies the geometry and the rheology of the complex natural process and these simplifications have to be made explicit before comparing the results with the geology. Geometrical simplifications of the current models involve the simulation of the Laramide orogeny that caused deformation in a wide fold-and-thrust belt in southern Mexico. This deformation phase has been attributed to mechanical coupling between a subhorizontally subducted slab and an overriding continental crust (Dickinson et al. 1988; Bird 1998). However, it has been observed that analogue models shortened by advancing a rigid vertical boundary laterally simulate most of the characteristics of fold-and-thrust belts (Bonini 2001). In the second phase, the deformation is attributed to the motion of the Chortis block after its partial detachment from North America in the Early Tertiary (Herrmann et al. 1994). The shear zone bounding the Xolapa complex to the north has an ESE strike, but, as structures observed in the field are mostly compatible with a transpressive regime, the movement of the wall was made to simulate an ENE direction of the contraction, and variations in the plate boundary through time were not considered. During the experiments, the compressive stresses causing model deformation are transmitted from the rigid moving wall, thus simulating a lateral transmission of forces from the plate boundaries. This represents a simplification of the natural process, where forces causing deformation of the lithosphere at plate boundaries may be transmitted vertically from below, driven by deformation of the mantle (Tikoff & Teyssier 1998). Addition- Q2 ally, in all the models, the rigid block was attached to the moving wall during transpression, preventing important block rotations likely to have occurred in the natural prototype. From a rheological point of view, the simple two-layer structure of the model, which is intended to simulate the crust only, is a further simplification of the natural situation. The experimental series was designed to investigate the deformation around a strong (rigid) crustal block (MOJB) embedded within a ‘normal’ continental crust. Since the crustal strength resides in the upper brittle layer, our model set-up considered a uniformly thick continental crust characterized by a region with thicker brittle crust. This implies that in the models the ductile crust below the rigid block is thinner than elsewhere. Unless the crust and mantle are decoupled, the compression of two adjacent crustal sections with different thicknesses may result in the indentation of the upper mantle of the thinner block into the less rigid lower crust of the thicker block (Harry et al. 1995). In addition, the cohesion of clay used in model Chortis 04 is not properly scaled and clearly exceeds the rigidity of the natural prototype, so that the clay block behaved as an indenter, emphasizing deformations at block boundaries. For this reason the results can only be qualitavely compared to the structures in the field. Several factors can have an influence on the structures formed by deformation, such as erosion and deposition in basins, pre-existing structures, effect of pore pressure in the growth and propagation of structures, thermal evolution or isostasy effects, none of which were considered in the modelling. Nevertheless, despite the abovementioned simplifications, comparisons of model results with Nature were useful in understanding the structural evolution. Comparison with Nature Although a single model cannot explain all the structural complexity observed in Nature, the combined results of our experiments simulated most of the styles of deformation and largescale structures observed around the rigid crustal block of the MOJB. Thus, these results suggest that the processes affecting both model and natural prototype were similar. We emphasize that our models are pertinent in a time interval from 88 to 36 Ma. Line drawings of COUPLING DURING LARAMIDE SHORTENING models compared with a schematic structural map of the south of Mexico are presented in Figure 13. The fold-and-thrust belt (Fig. 13, structure 1) of southern Mexico has been associated with the amalgamation of tectonic blocks during the Mesozoic or the Early Tertiary, the time of the Laramide episode. Recent microstructural data in the eastern Guerrero terrane suggest that the 135 Laramide structures have a double vergence and they have been interpreted in terms of a progressive ductile shear (Salinas-Prieto et al. 2000). During our experiments, double vergence was modelled and was accentuated by the presence of the rigid block. The first effect of the second phase of deformation is counterclockwise rotation of the thrusts and folds in the southwestern part of Fig. 13. Comparison of models with the natural prototype. The natural prototype structures are based mainly on Campa & Coney (1983), Sedlock et al. (1993), Ortega-Gutiérrez et al. (1999), Elı́as-Herrera & Ortega-Gutiérrez (2002), Ham-Wong (1981) and our own field data. 136 M. CERCA ET AL. the model (Fig. 13, structure 2). Similar effects have been documented in the southern part of the Guerrero –Morelos platform (Cerca & Ferrari 2001). Other evidence of Tertiary counterclockwise vertical-axis rotations in this area has been inferred from the palaeomagnetic data from Cretaceous carbonate sequences (Molina-Garza et al. 2003). Vertical-axis rotations and lateral translation of the high-strength block in the model mirror complex structures and thrusting of the rigid block over the adjacent crust at Papalutla (Fig. 13, structure 3), consistent with the geometry of the Papalutla thrust and related deformation in the Early Tertiary basins to the NW (Cerca & Ferrari 2001). Progressive strain at the eastern margin of the rigid block produced a thrust that propagated to the NW closely following the geometry of the block. This structure strikingly resembles the geometry and the kinematics of the Vista Hermosa fault (Fig. 13, structure 4), which has thrust Palaeozoic schists over Jurassic rocks (Sedlock et al. 1993). To the north of the rigid block in the experiments, uplift and arcuate folding of the adjacent part of the model were observed. This pattern of deformation, clearly influenced by the geometry of the rigid block, was emphasized in the model with the clay block. Similar structures were observed in the natural prototype in the Tentzo Ranges (Fig. 13, structure 5) where folds of Cretaceous carbonates define an arc convex toward the north. Although most of these folds were produced by the décollement of the carbonate succession, this process was likely triggered by the uplift of the basement as simulated in the model. As in the case of the Papalutla fault, the Tentzo Ranges were considered to be produced during the Laramide orogeny (Monroy & Sosa 1984). However, their anomalous orientation with respect to the general trend of the Laramide structures has not hitherto been explained. One obvious difference between analogue models and southern Mexico is that the structures observed within the MOJB did not develop in the models. These structures can be explained as reactivation of discontinuities existing before the Laramide event. One major example is the Oaxaca fault, which exhibits a complex history of lateral, inverse and normal movements beginning at least from the Jurassic or even the Palaeozoic time (Alaniz-Alvarez et al. 1994, 1996). Only tight folds and strike-slip faults affecting Tertiary red beds (Fig. 13, structure 6) resemble structures formed in the models. Finally, in the case of the model Chortis 04, left-lateral strikeslip and a basin are formed in the southwestern side of the block (Fig. 13, structure 7) coincident with the deposition of Tertiary red beds in the eastern Guerrero state. Vertical coupling and decoupling in the crust of southern Mexico during the Late Cretaceous and the Tertiary Our new fieldwork linked with previous research has recognized three deformation phases in southern Mexico: Late Cretaceous (Laramide) shortening, Early Tertiary left-lateral transpression, and post-Eocene transtension. A series of analogue models have been used to simulate the role of a rigid and thicker block (MOJB) within the upper crust during the first two deformation phases. The design of the models implies that the resulting structural pattern is mainly controlled by the strength of the upper brittle crust and the forces applied at the vertical boundaries of the MOJB. Although these conditions are given a priori, we believe that this could be the real case. Indeed it is likely that during the Laramide orogeny the mantle lithosphere was removed or at least weakened by the subhorizontal subduction of the Farallon plate. If this is the case, in the following stage the upper crust remained the most rigid part of the whole system. This view supports the claim of Jackson (2002) that the detailed patterns of surface faulting in orogenic zones are predominantly controlled by the strength of the upper crustal blocks and by the faults bounding them rather than by forces applied at the base of the lithosphere. In addition, in the models, decoupling between ductile and brittle layers was enhanced by the presence of the block. The higher strength and thickness of the block increase the mechanical contrast between brittle and ductile layers and hence the decoupling between lower and upper layers. This causes a propagation of strain in a wide area around the block during the second deformation phase. Thus, in our models, coupling or decoupling between the ductile and brittle layers are determined by the thickness and the rigidity of the upper crustal layer. In Nature, southern Mexico was subject to a general left-lateral strike slip regime along the developing Caribbean –North America plate boundary. During this Early Tertiary phase, strain in the lower crust should have been distributed homogeneously in the deformation zone between the two plates. By contrast, the deformation observed in the upper crust was focused on a small number of structures around the MOJB. This radically different pattern of deformation implies a small degree of coupling between upper and lower crust. COUPLING DURING LARAMIDE SHORTENING Conclusions We have performed a series of analogue modelling experiments to simulate the effect of two deformation phases on a layered brittle–ductile modelled crust incorporating a thicker upper crustal block. The block was constructed with either sand or clay to compare the mechanical anisotropy effects of a high contrast in strength and cohesion. Models reproduced most of the structures observed around the MOJB in Nature, suggesting a close similarity in deformation processes between Nature and model, and permit the reinterpretation of several key features of the Early Tertiary geological evolution of southern Mexico. We identify structures consistent with a transpressive regime during the second phase, which interfere with the structures formed previously in the Laramide event. We show that lateral partitioning of phase 2 strain is important north of the Xolapa complex, in contrast with previous interpretations that assign these structures to the Laramide deformation. The models predict a Tertiary motion along the Vista Hermosa fault, and that the structure propagated towards the NW following the margin of the MOJB. In the models, the propagation of deformation to the north is related to mechanical contrasts in strength and cohesion of the block with respect to the adjacent modelled crust. Structures formed in the tectonic interference zone present counterclockwise vertical-axis rotations consistent with the field evidence and palaeomagnetic data. Structures within the MOJB observed in Nature do not develop in the model. This is likely due to reactivation of pre-existing structures that influenced the deformation within the block, a factor not considered in the model. Without pre-existing structures the strength of the block increases as a function of the thickness. The experiments show that most of the structures observed in Nature can be reproduced using relatively few parameters and a simple two-layer analogue model. In our models, the degree of coupling between the ductile and brittle layers is controlled by the thickness and the rigidity of the upper crustal layer. The Early Tertiary structural patterns observed in southern Mexico around the MOJB suggest that it behaved similarly to the model. This research was supported by grant CONACyT 32509-T (to LF) and CONACYT– CNR bilateral grant. We thank Giovana Moratti, Chiara Delventisette and Domenico Montanari for their support and help during the laboratory work. Guido Schreurs, John Grocott, Dora CarreónFreyre, Susana Alaniz and an anonymous reviewer provided constructive criticisms that enormously improved 137 this work. MC also thanks CONACYT, whose grants permitted him to pursue his PhD, and a research stay in Italy. References ALANIZ -ALVAREZ , S.A., NIETO -SAMANIEGO , A.F. & ORTEGA -GUTIÉRREZ , F. 1994. Structural evolution of the Sierra de Juarez mylonitic complex, State of Oaxaca, Mexico. Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Geológicas, 11, 147– 156. ALANIZ -ALVAREZ , S.A., VAN DER HEYDEN , P., NIETO SAMANIEGO , A.F. & ORTEGA -GUTIERREZ , F. 1996. Radiometric and kinematic evidence for Middle Jurassic strike-slip faulting in southern Mexico related to the opening of the Gulf of Mexico. Geology, 24 (5), 443–446. ALANIZ -ALVAREZ , S.A., NIETO -SAMANIEGO , A.F., MORÁN -ZENTENO , D.J. & ALVA -ALDAVE , L. 2002. Rhyolitic volcanism in extension zone associated with strike-slip tectonics in the Taxco region, southern Mexico. Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 118, 1 – 14. BIRD , P. 1998. Kinematic history of the Laramide orogeny in latitudes 358– 498 N, western United States. Tectonics, 17 (5), 780– 801. BONINI , M. 2001. Passive roof thrusting and forelandward fold propagation in scaled brittle– ductile physical models of thrust wedges. Journal of Geophysical Research, 48 (B2), 2291– 2311. BUNGE , H.P. & GRAND , S.T. 2000. Mesozoic platemotion history below the northeast Pacific Ocean from seismic images of the subducted Farallon slab. Nature, 405, 337– 340. CABRAL -CANO , E., LANG , H.R. & HARRISON , C.G.A. 2000a. Stratigraphic assessment of the Arcelia – Teloloapan area, southern Mexico: implications for southern Mexico’s post-Neocomian tectonic evolution. Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 13, 443– 457. CABRAL -CANO , E., DRAPER , G., LANG , H.R. & HARRISON , C.G.A. 2000b. Constraining the Late Mesozoic and Early Tertiary tectonic evolution of southern Mexico: structure and deformation history of the Tierra Caliente region, southern Mexico. Journal of Geology, 108, 427–446. CAMPA , M.F. 1978. La evolución tectónica de Tierra Caliente, Guerrero. Boletı́n de la Sociedad Geológica Mexicana, 39, 52– 64. CAMPA , U.M.F. & CONEY , P.J. 1983. Tectonostratigraphic terranes and mineral resource distributions in Mexico. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 20, 1040 –1051. CAMPOS -ENRIQUEZ , J.O. & SANCHEZ -ZAMORA , O. 2000. Crustal structure across southern Mexico inferred from gravity data. Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 13, 479–489. CERCA , M. & FERRARI , L. 2001. Vertically decoupled Paleocene – Eocene wrenching in southern Mexico and its possible relation with the activation of the Caribbean – North America boundary. Eos Trans. AGU, 82 (47), Fall Meet. Suppl., Abstract T12D-0938. 138 M. CERCA ET AL. CERCA , M., FERRARI , L. & LÓPEZ -MARTÍNEZ , M. 2003. Early Tertiary deformation in southern Mexico and its relation to the transfer of the Chortis block from the North America to the Caribbean plate. Geological Society of America Cordilleran Section Meeting 2003, Abstract T8 33– 9. CONSEJO DE RECURSOS MINERALES 1998. Carta geológico-minera y geoquı́mica de la Hoja San Miguel Talea de Castro. Escala 1:50,000 (E14 D-39), Consejo de Recursos Minerales, Pachuca, Hgo., Mexico. CONSEJO DE RECURSOS MINERALES 2001. Carta geológico-minera y geoquı́mica de la Hoja Oaxaca. Escala 1:250,000 (E14-9), Consejo de Recursos Minerales, Pachuca, Hgo., Mexico. Q3 CORTI , G., BONINI , M., INNOCENTI , F., MANETTI , P. & MULUGETA , G. 2001. Centrifuge models simulating magma emplacement during oblique rifting. Journal of Geodynamics, 31, 557 –576. DE CSERNA , Z., ORTEGA -GUTIÉRREZ , F. & PALACIOS NIETO , M. 1980. Reconocimiento geologico de la parte central de la cuenca del alto Rı́o Balsas, estados de Guerrero y Puebla. In: Sociedad Geológica Mexicana, Libro Guia de la Excursión Geológica a la Parte Central de la Cuenca del Alto Rio Balsas, V Convención Geológica Nacional, 2– 33. DICKINSON , W.R., KLUTE , M.A., HAYES , M.J., JANECKE , S.U., LUNDIN , E.R., MC KITTRICK , M.A. & OLIVARES , M.D. 1988. Paleogeographic and paleotectonic setting of Laramide sedimentary basins in the central Rocky Mountain region. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 100, 1023– 1039. DUCEA , M., SHOEMAKER , S., GEHRELS , G., VERVOORT , J. & RUIZ , J. 2003. Zircon U–Pb geochronology constraints on the magmatic and tectonic evolution of the Xolapa complex, southern Mexico. Geological Society of America Cordilleran Section Meeting 2003, Abstract with Programs. ELÍAS -HERRERA , M. & ORTEGA -GUTIÉRREZ , F. 2002. Caltepec fault zone: an Early Permian dextral transpressional boundary between the Proterozoic Oaxacan and Paleozoic Acatlan Complexes, southern Mexico, and regional tectonic implications. Tectonics, 21 (3), 1– 18. ENGEBRETSON , D.C., COX , A. & GORDON , R.G. 1985. Relative plate motions between oceanic and continental plates in the Pacific basin. Geological Society of America Special Paper, 206, 1 –64. FRIES , C., JR . 1960. Geologia del Estado de Morelos y de Partes Adyacentes de Mexico y Guerrero, Region Central Meridional de Mexico. Boletı́n de la Sociedad Geológica Mexicana, 60. GARCÍA -PÉREZ , F. & URRUTIA -FUCUGAUCHI , J. 1997. Crustal structure of the Arteaga Complex, Michoacán, southern Mexico, from gravity and magnetics. Geoı́sica Internacional, 36 (4), 235–244. GORDON , R.G. 1998. The plate tectonic approximation: plate nonrigidity, diffuse plate boundaries, and global plate reconstructions. Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 26, 615 –642. HAM -WONG , J.M. 1981. Prospecto: Guelatao. Informe Geológico No. 799, Zona Sur. Petroleos Mexicanos. HARRY , D.L., OLDOW , J.S. & SAWYER , D.S. 1995. The growth of orogenic belts and the role of crustal heterogeneities in decollement tectonics. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 107, 1411 – 1426. HERNÁNDEZ -ROMANO , U., AGUILERA -FRANCO , N., MARTINEZ -MEDRANO , M. & BARCELÓ -DUARTE , J. 1997. Guerrero – Morelos Platform drowning at the Cenomanian – Turonian boundary, Huitziltepec area, Guerrero State, southern Mexico. Cretaceous Research, 18, 661– 686. HERRMANN , U.R., NELSON , B.K. & RATSCHBACHER , L. 1994. The origin of a terrane: U/Pb zircon geochronology and tectonic evolution of the Xolapa Complex (southern Mexico). Tectonics, 13, 455– 474. HUBBERT , M.K. 1937. Theory of scale models as applied to the study of geologic structures. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, 48, 1459 –1520. JACKSON , J. 2002. Strength of the continental lithosphere: time to abandon the jelly sandwich? GSA Today, September, 4 –9. JORDING , A., FERRARI , L., ARZATE , J. & JÖDICKE , H. 2000. Crustal variations and terranes boundaries in southern Mexico as imaged by magnetotelluric transfer functions. Tectonophysics, 327, 1 –13. LANG , H.R. & FRERICHS , W.E. 1998. New planktic foraminiferal data documenting Conician age for Laramide Orogeny onset and pelooceanography in southern Mexico. Journal of Geology, 106, 635– 640. LANG , H.R., BARROS , J.A., CABRAL -CANO , E., DRAPER , G., HARRISON , C.G.A., JANSMA , P.E. & JOHNSON , C.A. 1996. Terrane deletion in northern Guerrero state. Geofı́sica Internacional, 35 (4), 349– 359. MARTINY , B., MARTÍNEZ -SERRANO , R., MORÁN ZENTENO , D.J., MACÍAS -ROMO , C. & AYUSO , R. 2000. Stratigraphy, geochemistry and tectonic significance of the Oligocene magmatic rocks in western Oaxaca, southern Mexico. Tectonophysics, 318, 71 –98. MESCHEDE , M. & FRISCH , W. 1998. A plate-tectonic model for the Mesozoic and Early Cenozoic history of the Caribbean plate. Tectonophysics, 296, 269– 291. MESCHEDE , M., FRISCH , W., HERRMANN , U.R. & RATSCHBACHER , L. 1996. Stress transmission across an active plate boundary: an example from southern Mexico. Tectonophysics, 266, 81– 100. MEZA -FIGUEROA , D., VALENCIA -GÓMEZ , V., OCHOA -LANDÍN , L., PÉREZ -SEGURA , E. & DÍAZ -SALGADO , C. 2001. 40Ar/39Ar geochronology and geochemistry of Laramidic plutons from the Mezcala mining district, Guerrero, Mexico. Actas INAGEQ, 7 (1), 21. MILLS , R.A. 1998. Carbonate detritus and mylonite zones in Guerrero, Mexico and northern Honduras: new evidence for detachment of the Chortis block from southern Mexico. Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 11 (3), 291– 307. Q4 COUPLING DURING LARAMIDE SHORTENING MOLINA -GARZA , R.S., BÖHNEL , H. & HERNÁNDEZ , T. 2003. Paleomagnetism of the Cretaceous Morelos and Mezcala formations, southern Mexico. Tectonophysics, 361, 301 –317. MONROY , M. & SOSA , A. 1984. Geologia de la Sierra del Tentzo, Puebla, borde norte del terreno Mixteco. Sociedad Geologica Mexicana, Boletı́n, 45 (1 – 2), 43 –72. MORÁN -ZENTENO , D.J. 1992. Investigaciones isotópicas de Rb– Sr y Sm – Nd en rocas cristalinas de la región Tierra Colorada –Acapulco – Cruz Grande, Estado de Guerrero. PhD thesis, UNAM. MORÁN -ZENTENO , D.J., CORONA -CHAVEZ , P. & TOLSON , G. 1996. Uplift and subduction erosion in southwestern Mexico since the Oligocene: pluton geobarometry constraints. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 141, 51– 65. MORÁN -ZENTENO , D.J., TOLSON , G., et al. 1999. Tertiary arc-magmatism of the Sierra Madre del Sur, Mexico, and its transition to the volcanic activity of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt. Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 12, 513– 535. MURILLO , G., TORRES , R. & NAVARRETE , O. 1992. El macizo de la Mixtequita: redefinición. XI Convención Geológica Nacional. Sociedad Geológica Mexicana, Libro de Resúmenes, 131. ORTEGA -GUTIÉRREZ , F. 1980. Rocas volcánicas del Maestrichtiano en el área de San Juan Tetelcingo, Estado de Guerrero. In: Sociedad Geológica Mexicana, Libro Guı́a de la Excursión Geológica a la Parte Central de la Cuenca del Alto Rı́o Balsas, V Convención Geológica Nacional, 34 –38. ORTEGA -GUTIÉRREZ , F., MITRE -SALAZAR , L.M., ROLDAN -QUINTANA , J., SÁNCHEZ -RUBIO , G. & DE LA FUENTE , M. 1990. North America Continent –Ocean Transects Program, Transect H-3: Acapulco Trench to the Gulf of Mexico Across Southern Mexico. Geological Society of America. ORTEGA -GUTIÉRREZ , F., ELÍAS -HERRERA , M., REYES SALAS , M., MACÍAS -ROMO , C. & LÓPEZ , R. 1999. Late Ordovician– Early Silurian continental collisional orogeny in southern Mexico and its bearing on Gondwana – Laurentia connections. Geology, 27, 719 – 722. Q5 ORTEGA -GUTIÉRREZ , F., et al. 1992. RAMBERG , H. 1981. Gravity, Deformation and Earth’s Crust. Academic Press, San Diego, CA, 452. RATSCHBACHER , L., RILLER , U., MESCHEDE , M., HERRMANN , U. & FRISCH , W. 1991. Second look at suspect terranes in southern Mexico. Geology, 19, 1233 –1236. RILLER , U., RATSCHBACHER , L. & FRISCH , W. 1992. Left-lateral transtension along the Tierra Colorada deformation zone, northern margin of the Xolapa magmatic arc, of southern Mexico. Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 5, 237 – 249. 139 SALINAS -PRIETO , J.C., MONOD , O. & FAURE , M. 2000. Ductile deformations of opposite vergence in the eastern part of the Guerrero Terrane (SW Mexico). Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 13, 389– 402. SCHAAF , P., MORÁN -ZENTENO , D., HERNÁNDEZ BERNAL , M.S., SOLÍS -PICHARDO , G., TOLSON , G. & KÖHLER , H. 1995. Paleogene continental margin truncation in southwestern Mexico: geochronological evidence. Tectonics, 14, 1339 –1350. SCHAAF , P., WEBER , B., WEIS , P., GRO ß, A., Q6 KÖHLER , H. & ORTEGA -GUTIÉRREZ , F. 2002. The Chiapas Massif (Mexico) revised: new geologic and isotopic data for basement characteristics. In: MILLER , H. (ed.) Contributions to Latin-American Geology, N. Jb. Geol. Paläont. Abh., 225, 1 – 23. SEDLOCK , R.L., ORTEGA -GUTIERREZ , F. & SPEED , R.C. 1993. Tectonostratigraphic terranes and tectonic evolution of Mexico. Geological Society of America Special Paper, 278, 153. TEYSSIER , C. & TIKOFF , B. 1998. Strike-slip parti- Q7 tioned transpression of the San Andreas fault system: a lithospheric scale approach. In: Continental Transpression and Transtension Tectonics. HOLDSWORTH , R.E., STRACHAN , R.A. & DEWEY , J.F. (eds) Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 135, 143– 158. Q8 TIKOFF , B. & TEYSSIER , C. 1998. URRUTIA -FUCUGAUCHI , J. & FLORES -RUIZ , J.H. 1996. Bouguer anomalies and regional crustal structure in central Mexico. International Geology Review, 38, 176–194. URRUTIA -FUCUGAUCHI , J. & FERRUSQUÍA -VILLAFRANCA , I. 2001. Paleomagnetic results for the Middle-Miocene continental Suchilquitongo Formation, Valley of Oaxaca, southeastern Mexico. Geofı́sica Internacional, 40, 191– 206. VALDÉZ , C., MOONEY , W., et al. 1986. Crustal structure of Oaxaca, Mexico, from seismic refraction measurements. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 76, 547– 563. VAUCHEZ , A., TOMMASI , A. & BARROUL , G. 1998. Rheological heterogeneity, mechanical anisotropy and deformation of the continental lithosphere. Tectonophysics, 296, 61– 86. WEBER , B. & KÖHLER , H. 1999. Sm–Nd, Rb –Sr and U– Pb isotope geochronology of a Grenville terrane in southern Mexico: origin and geologic history of the Guichicovi complex. Precambrian Research, 96, 245– 262. WILLNER , A.P., SEBAZUNGU , E., GERYA , T.V., MARESCH , W.V. & KROHE , A. 2002. Numerical modeling of PT-paths related to rapid exhumation of high pressure rocks from the crustal root in the Variscan Erzgebirge Dome (Saxony/Germany). Journal of Geodynamics, 33, 281– 314.