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Bol. Depto. Geol. UniSon, 2005, Vols. 18 y 19, p. 141 - 152 EOCENE TECTONIC EVOLUTION OF NW MEXICO (SONORA and BAJA CALIFORNIA) Luigi RADELLI(1) and Ariel G. NAVARRO-HERRERA(2) Departamento de Geología, Universidad de Sonora E-mail: (1) [email protected]. (2) [email protected] RESUMEN Se toman en cuenta la evolución del Arco Volcánico Continental (Arco Huepac) del Eoceno de Sonora por un lado; y los datos paleomagnéticos disponibles sobre el Conglomerado Poway del Eoceno de San Diego, California. Se presenta una interpretación paleogeográfica y paleotectónica del NW de México que permite conciliar los datos geológicos y geofísicos. ABSTRACT The evolution of the Eocene Volcanic Arc (Huepac Arc) of Sonora and the available paleomagnetic data concerning the Eocene Poway Conglomerate of San Diego are considered. A paleogeographic and paleotectonic interpretation of NW Mexico (Sonora and Baja California) during the Eocene is worked out that is in agreement with both the geological and the paleomagnetic data. PROLOGUE During the Eocene the global system of plates underwent a general reorganisation. This is attested, for instance, by the following events of that time: the main phase of the Alpine Orogeny, one of the main phases of the Andean Orogeny, the opening of several marginal seas in Eastern Asia, the change of direction of the movement of the Pacific and North America Plates above the hot spots of Hawaii and Yellowstone respectively. In connection with, and as part of, this global geodynamic revolution, the events discussed herebelow occurred in north-western Mexico. * During the Early and Middle Eocene (from ±50 to ±40 Ma), a huge Continental Volcanic Arc was built in Sonora, which has been called Huepac Arc. It is a NNW-SSE-trending belt of the axial part of the State, that contains the socalled Metamorphic Core Complexes (MCC) of Magdalena and Mazatan–Huepac (fig. 1), * As shown by paleomagnetic data, during the Late Eocene (from ±40 to ±35 Ma) the western part of north-western continental México together with adjacent California and Baja California – the Baja-Borderland terrane of Abbott and Smith (1989) – was displaced 14º ± 5º (say, some 1500 km, of which 300 km accounted for by the San Andreas Fault) northward rotated 142 L. RADELLI and A. G. NAVARRO-HERRERA 30º clock-wise (Abbott and Smith 1989: Gastil, 1991) at San Diego. * During the same time interval (± 40 to ±35 Ma) the Huepac Arc was deformed and uplifted. In particular, the shear zone in question has been observed: (a) in the vicinities of Hermosillo, (b) along the Ures-Mazocahui road on the THE HUEPAC ARC (1) During the Early and Middle Eocene (± 50 to ±40 Ma), a huge Continental Volcanic Arc was built in Sonora, where it was called Huepac Arc. It occur as a NNW-SSE-trending belt of the axial part of the State of Sonora, that contains the so-called Metamorphic Core Complexes (MCC) of Magdalena and MazatanHuepac (Fig. 1A and 1B) but is wider than the belt of the MCC itself. The evolution of the Huepac Arc has been dealt with previously (Radelli et al., 1992; Lucero and Radelli, 1993; Radelli et al., 1995; Radelli and Lucero, 1996a; Radelli and Lucero, 1996b; Radelli, 1998a; Radelli, 1998b; Radelli, 1999). Here, such discussion is not repeated only its results are summarised. The Huepac Arc was characterised by the emplacement of both intrusive and effusive rocks. These include deep-seated two mica ± garnet-bearing granites and, at higher crustal levels, cupolas of granitoids, and rhyolites, all of them genetically related with a magma underplating of the North American continental crust. Fig. 1 A – The Huepac Arc: the Cordilleran Inner Belt of two mica ± garnetbearing granites (of Eocene age in Sonora) and of Metamorphic Core Complexes; belt of Eocene cupolas. (2) During the Late Eocene, at about 40Ma, the Huepac Arc was affected by a low angle zone of ductile shear that became a mylonitic zone (Bronner and Radelli, 1996). In several segments this zone has been subsequently folded to give way to the so-called metamorphic core complexes, according to the model proposed by Reynolds and Lister (1990); then the Huepac Arc was uplifted. Fig. 1B – The Cordilleran Inner Belt of two mica ± garnet-bearing granites (of Eocene age in Sonora) and of Metamorphic Core Complexes. left side of the Valley of Rio Sonora and (c) in the lowland at the base of the Mazatan Massif (Anderson, Silver and Salas, 1980); (d) along the Hermosillo-Tecoripa-Yecora road upon its L. RADELLI and A. G. NAVARRO-HERRERA 143 Fig. 2 – Structure of a zone of ductile shear. Characters of a zone of simple shear, as projected on the plane parallel to X and Z of the ellipsoid of the finite deformation. The schistosity/foliation is defined by the X (main) and Y (intermediate) axes of said ellipsoid. The direction of rotation is defined by the pitch of the stretching X in relation to the surfaces limiting the deformation of the shear zone. [After Steck, 1990] crossing of the Yaqui River; (e) in the area of Onavas-Realito near the Yaqui River, and (f) in the sector of Santa Rosa northwards. In all of these instances the shear zone cuts through the Laramide (Late Cretaceous – Paleocene, 67 ±10 Ma) granitoids, and at (a), (b), (c) and (d), it is easily recognized thank to the deformation of the andesitic (s.l.) dykes that cut through those granitoids and corresponding to a late pulse of the Laramide magmatic phase, that cut through those granitoids. This point has to be stressed: the shear zone is not developed between a basement and a cover, but within two portions of the Laramide batholite. The situation is similar of that of ductile shear zones of the Central Alps (Western Swiss Alps), that have been carefully studied by Steck (1990). A zone of ductile shear corresponds to a slab of rocks affected by a unique schistosity/foliation. A zone of ductile shear (mylonitic zone) is usually divided from the undeformed domains by two roughly parallel sufaces (Fig.2). At the sections of Ures-Mazocahui and Mazatan the zone of ductile shearing corresponds to the tectonite gneiss level that, in the so-called metamorphic core complexes divides the nontectonite basement (below) from, where it exists, the décollement zone beginning with a microbrecciated level, and from a slab of undeformed units (above) that includes the two mica ± garnet-bearing Eocene granite. A basic character of this shear zone is that it contains muscovite which, unlike the muscovite of the two micas ± garnet-bearing granites 144 L. RADELLI and A. G. NAVARRO-HERRERA which is magmatic, is metamorphic in origin and related to the deformation itself. de granitoides are cut, at a higher level, by a near horizontal zone of fault. Also, along such fault the upper slab, containing Tarahumara volcanics (Upper Cretaceous – Paleocene) and Eocene granitoid cupolas, appears to have moved north-eastwards. Thus, along the hereabove indicated shear zone(s) the overriding un-deformed slab(s) became allochthonous and was (were) translated north-eastwards after the Early and Middle Eocene magmatism and prior to the Oligocene (±35 Ma) deposition of the andesite and rhyolite of the Sierra Madre Occidental (see Radelli, this volume), that is during the Late Eocene. The time interval of such motion is the same as that of the northward translation of the western part of California, Sonora and of Baja California, the Baja Borderland of Abbott and Smith (1989), discussed by Gastil (1991). It is worth noting that the north-eastern motion along the above discussed shear zone is similar to that of about 150 km observed in the western USA across the western Idaho suture zone and northern Rocky Mountains (Leeman et al., 1992). Fig. 3 – Distribution of the MCC in Sonora and Arizona. 1: Mazatan; 2: Madera; 3: Magdalena; 4: Pozo Verde; 5: Comobabi-Coyote; 6: Catalina-Rincon; 7: Tortolita; 8: Picacho; 9: Santa Teresa-Pinaleno; 10: South Moutain-White Thank; 11: Harquahalla; 12: Harcuvar; 13: Whipple. EAST OF THE HUEPAC ARC: THE SIERRA MADRE OCCIDENTAL Along the shear zone in question the undeformed upper slab, which contains the two mica ± garnet-bearing granite and pegmatites, has been moved north-eastwards. The section of the Tecoripa-Yecora road near the Yaqui River exposes the upper part of the shear zone. In the sector of Onavas-Realito, as well as at that of Santa Rosa north-eastwards, the Larami- East of the Huepac Arc there is the Sierra Madre Occidental (SMOc). There,upon the uplift of the Huepac Arc a basin was opened. It will be filled up first by a mollasse, the conglomerate, the Novosaigame Conglomerate (Bockhoven, 1980; Cochemé, 1985; Cochemé and Demant, 1991), and then (from ±35 to ±24 Ma), following a short lived andesitic pulse, by the mostly Oligocene rhyolites and ignimbrites that constitute the bulk of the SMOc (Cochemé, 1985; Cochemé and Demant, 1991). The basement of this stratigraphic pile, and of said basin as a whole, can be observed on L. RADELLI and A. G. NAVARRO-HERRERA 145 morphism, and penetrative deformation (schistosity/foliation). This block corresponds to the paleomagnetically defined “Baja – Borderland terrane” of Abbott and Smith (1989) discussed here-below. Fig. 4 - Simplified structural map showing the sub-horizontal attitude of the Yaqui River Fault in the Yaqui Valley in the vicinities of Onavas. 3: Post-Yaqui River Fault volcanic and sedimentary deposits. 2: Upper Triassic strata, Upper Cretaceous to Paleocene volcanic and sedimentary deposits, Sierra Madre Occidental Volcanics, Baucarit Formation. 1 : Laramide granitoids. scanty outcrops and as xenoliths in the Oligocene rhyolites. It is characterized by Rodinian metasedimentary rocks (Stewart al., 2002), Palaeozoic and Triassic sedimentary rocks, and Laramide (Late Cretaceous – Paleocene: 67 ±10 Ma [Damon et al., 1983]) both intrusive (granitoids) and effusive (andesite and rhyolite of Tarahumara Formation) igneous rocks. These igneous rocks shows neither a metamorphic facies nor a penetrative deformation, such as schistosity/foliation, that could be assigned a Eocene geological age. WEST OF THE HUEPAC ARC: THE BAJA-BORDERLAND BLOCK West of the Huepac Arc there is a block, comprised of western Sonora and Baja, which is entirely free from Eocene magmatism, meta- Fig. 5 – Some localities of Sonora cited in the text. In Sonora, said block includes, in its northern part, the famous dolomitic sequences of Caborca and San Luis, and their respective crystalline basements, Bamori and San Luis (Radelli et al., 1997; De la Cruz and Dorame, 2000); the shallow water Cambrian deposits which do not occur East of it; the Lower Jurassic volcaniclastic deposits of the Santa Rosa Formation, that do not occur east of it, where only Upper Jurassic volcaniclastic deposits are found. Furthermore and above all, the autochthonous Bisbee and Cerro de Oro Lower Cretaceous se-quences (sandstones and limestone), widespread east of it, are lacking in the BajaBorderland block. Within the Baja-Borderland Block the Lower Cretaceous is represented in Baja California by the Alisitos Arc and the Olvidada Nappe (Radelli, 1988a, 1988b, 1990), 146 L. RADELLI and A. G. NAVARRO-HERRERA and in Sonora by several allochthonous bodies (nappes) such as those of El Chanate and Cerro Chino (Dorame, 2003). Finally, between the latitudes of Hermosillo and Guaymas the block in question consists of a basement made up by un-deformed Upper Cretaceous granitoids, with minor bodies of possibly Palaeozoic and/or Mesozoic sedimentary rocks, and a cover of Miocene volcanics (MoraAlvarez and McDowell, 2000). On its western side the Baja-Borderland Block is bordered by Eocene sedimentary deposits: the already mentioned Poway Formation in the southern California (San Diego), the Tepetate Formation in the Baja California. THE EOCENE MOUNTAIN CHAIN OF SONORA In the area of San Diego (California) there is the Eocene Poway Conglomerate, which had its source in the area of Tajitos in northern Sonora (Abbott and Smith, 1989). Dealing with the above exposed paleomagnetic data concerning the Poway Conglomerate, Abbott and Smith (1989) stated that “any boundary separating a paleomagnetically defined Baja-Borderland terrane” (or rather BajaBorderland block) “from the craton since Eocene time was at least 100 km east of the Gulf of California in northernmost Sonora”. The Baja-Borderland terrane of Abbott and Smith (1989) appears to be an equivalent of the here-above indicated block bounding to the west the Huepac Arc. Thus, concerning such block, the conclusion reached by said authors is in agreement with that exposed here-above. Gastil (1991) addressed directly the question of the clock-wise rotation of 30º and the 14º±5º northward translation of the Baja-Borderland terrane of Abbott and Smith (1989) - a minimum of 1500 km. as far as the Californias are concerned, [The subsequent displacement of about 300 km along the San Andreas Fault, from 4.5 Ma onward, occurred between Baja and Sonora, that is, actually, between two parts of the Baja-Borderland terrane, or block.] Gastil (1991) assumed that the terrane (block) in question could have travelled north along a California-Oaxaca megashear.with a convexity towards the West (implying, possibly, an accordance with the subduction zone supposed at work along the pacific margin). It would seem that he conceived this megashear as a simple “linear” structure similar, for instance, to that of the Insubric Line of the Alps or, say, that of the Northern Fault of the Pyrenees, or even that of the San Andreas Fault. Then, he devised three optional positions of said supposed California – Oaxaca megashear and looked for it in the field – but he found none. Because of this he concluded that “a variety of geological data across the borderland-batholith boundary, within the peninsula, across the Gulf of California, and within the State of Sonora, Mexico appear to preclude the existence of a megashear along which peninsular California could have travelled northward. […] the data of paleomagnetism and other elements of geology are in direct conflict. The resolution of this enigma will require an important revision of current assumption”. At this point the question of the tectonic significance of the belt of the Huepac Arc in relation with the adjacent areas of NW Mexico (Sonora and Baja) ought to be addressed directly. The main points to be considered are as follows: (a) The axial part of Sonora corresponds to a belt that contains Early and Middle Eocene magmatic products genetically related to a magmatic underplating of the continental crust of North America, which are lacking both eastand westwards of it. (b) During the Late Eocene such belt has been deformed into a general east-vergent L. RADELLI and A. G. NAVARRO-HERRERA structure to become a real arc, the Huepac Continental Volcanic Arc properly. The deformation is the result of a gently dipping, and subsequently folded, zone of ductile shear – i.e., the mylonitic, and metamorphic, zone of its so-called metamorphic core complexes, the southernmost of which is that of Mazatan, Sonora. (c) After the Eocene and prior to the opening of the Gulf of California at ±4.5 Ma, the State of Sonora was affected by at least three main extensional phases (at ± 24 Ma, ± 20 Ma, and ± 10 Ma), which are discussed in a companion paper (Radelli, this volume; see also Valenzuela et al., this volume). Taken together, the points (a) and (b) establish the Huepac Arc as a generally east vergent belt of crustal deformation and thickening, i.e. as an Eocene Mountain Chain, of which the region of the present-day SMOc is the foreland. What stated at point (b) suggests that Gastil’s (1991) California-Oaxaca megashear(s) was (were) could not show a convexity towards the West; and that its convexity, if any, should have been towards the East instead. On the other hand, what indicated at point (c) clearly suggests that an Eocene “ linear” megashear, as that considered, and looked for, by Gastil (1991), cannot have preserved such a continuous simple character, for it has been necessarily disrupted by the already mentioned post-Eocene extensional deformations (see Valenzuela et al., this volume; Radelli a, this volume). Thus, the lacking in north-western Mexico of a self-evident, well preserved, Eocene “megashear” is not indication that “the data of paleomagnetism and other elements of geology are in direct conflict”. Under the circumstances 147 the original megashear should be recognized taking into account the contrasting stratigraphic and deformational histories of the blocks that by such megashear were divided: the Baja – Borderland Block and the Huepac Arc. PALEOGEOGRAPHY AND TECTONIC EVOLUTION To restore the Baja-Borderland Block to its Eocene position taking into account the paleomagnetic data obtained on the Eocene Poway Formation of San Diego, the Baja-Borderland Block should be (a) moved some 1200 km south-west-wards along the eastern limit of the Baja-Borderland Block, bringing San Diego at the latitude of Mazatlan (Fig. 6a); and, (b) concomitantly rotated about 30º counter-clockwise at the latitude of San Diego. The question is to establish around which pivotal point such rotation took place. It seems reasonable to associate the genesis of the low angle deformation we have dealt with in discussing the MCC of the Huepac Arc of Sonora with the coeval clockwise rotation of the Baja-Borderland Block. As already mentioned, such deformation has been recognized as far south as Onavas/Rio Chico and Realito (Cuatro Hermanos mining prospect), that is some 50 km north of the latitude of Guaymas. Still southwards, the Eocene Huepac Volcanic Arc continues [it is well known, for instance, at the Tayoltita Mine, Durango (Horner,1998)] but the Eocene deformation does not occur, at least on surface. Thus, although the overall structural geology of the area is incompletely explored as yet, it seems permissible to think that the rotation in question occurred around a pivot located not far from the original location of the point of where is Guaymas, at present (Fig. 6b), and where the 148 L. RADELLI and A. G. NAVARRO-HERRERA Fig. 6 – Eocene motion of the Baja-Borderland Block according to paleomagnetic data on the Poway Formation of San Diego, southern California. On fig. 6a the Baja-Borderland Block is moved 1500 km southwestwards. On fig. 6b the BajaBorderland Block is then rotated 30º counter-clockwise. Thus, fig. 6b shows the original Eocene location of the Baja-Borderland Block according to the paleomagnetic data. The curve lines indicate the clockwise rotation of the Baja-Borderland Block during the Late Eocene. (See text for discussion) edge of the Proterozoic crust of North America it is worth noting that the distribution and would be (Valencia–Moreno et al., 2001). And extent of the MCC of Sonora and Arizona ap- L. RADELLI and A. G. NAVARRO-HERRERA 149 pears to be well in accordance with this scheme (Fig. 3) A large space is comprised between the position of the eastern limit of the Baja-Borderland Block prior to its clockwise rotation and that consequent to said rotation (Fig. 6b). There is no trace in Sonora of any oceanic Eocene formation. As a matter of consequence, it is not permitted to suppose that the rotation of the Baja-Borderland Block occurred thanks to the consumption of an oceanic crust. It has to be thought instead that its rotation was made possible by the crustal shortening shown by the Huepac Arc, in fact by the genesis of the Eocene mountain chain of Sonora, the Huepac Mountain Chain. How did such shortening occur ? To answer this question it is very much worth remembering Ampferer’s (1906) with his Verchluckung (French: engloutissement), Hobbs’ (1914), Argand’s (1916), and Amstutz’s (1955) ideas on the genesis of the arcuate geological structures as that of the Huepac Mountain Chain. Their ideas (Radelli and Desmons, 1997), that later on were expressed as “A-subduction, underthrust flexures, or “intracontinental subduction” were clearly formulated by Hobbs (1914) as follows: Arcuate structure representing a reduplcation of strata in recumbent and ruptured folds requires that the duplicated material shall have migrated centripetally from outside the arc […] The active force (thrust) which produced rock folds, instead of operating from behind and above the anticline, is applied below and in front. Continuation of the process yields therefore not “overturned” and “over- Fig. 7 – The Baja-Borderland Block after the Eocene motion and prior to the Pliocene (±4.5 Ma) opening of the Gulf of California. Black:: Eocene Mountain Chain of Sonora. Compare with Fig. 6 and Fig. 3. 150 L. RADELLI and A. G. NAVARRO-HERRERA thrust” but underturned and underthrust flexures […] Applied to the Alps, this requires that the main active force concerned in their folding came from the northwest, instead of the southeast, as generally assumed. Fig. 8 – Generalized structure of the Canadian Rocky Mountains. (After Debelmas and Mascle, 1991) According to this principle and to the fact that the Baja-Borderland Block does not record an Eocene deformation (as the case would be had this unit “pushed” the adjacent one) the origin of the east-vergent (s.l.) Huepac Mountain Chain should be related not to a eastvergent “pushing” of the Baja-Borderland, but to a west-oriented (s.l.) underthrusting of the block on the east of that chain itself, to an intracontinental A-subduction, similar, for instance, to that of the Rocky Mountains of Canada (Fig. 8). At least as an educated guess said underthrusting may in turn be related to the Eocene opening of the Rio Grande Rift. North and east of Hermosillo several allochthonous Lower Cretaceous bodies (nappes) have been put in evidence and assigned a Oregonian (“Mid-Cretaceous”) age of emplacement (e.g., Dorame, 2003). The rationale for this was that the Oregonian Orogeny (and Mountain Chain) was the youngest such structure known in Sonora. However, this cannot be maintained any longer. In fact, on the one hand, it has been shown in the foregoing that a huge, deepseated crustal shortening has taken place there during the Eocene; and, on the other hand, it has recently been proven that at Sierra de los Chinos (Sahuaripa) an allochthonous body of Lower Cretaceous rocks (nappe) was also emplaced during the Eocene at a higher structural level (see Radelli et al., this volume). Thus, the chronology of the emplacements of certain nappes of Sonora shall have to be revised. REFERENCES CITED ABBOTT, P.L., and SMITH, T.E. 1989, Sonora, Mexico, source for the Eocene Poway Conglomerate of southern California. 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In BARTH, A., ed., Contributions to Crustal Evolutionof the Southwestern United States. Geological Society of America, Special Paper 365, p. 5-18. L. RADELLI and A. G. NAVARRO-HERRERA 153