Paleomagnetic determinations of vertical-axis tectonic rotations from Late Cretaceous and Paleocene strata of Bolivia

Geology ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 23 (9) ◽  
pp. 799 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. F. Butler ◽  
D. R. Richards ◽  
T. Sempere ◽  
L. G. Marshall
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lin Li ◽  
Guillaume Dupont-Nivet ◽  
Pierrick Roperch ◽  
Yani Najman ◽  
Mustafa Kaya ◽  
...  

<p>Contrasting models have been proposed to explain the formation of the Pamir salient: either largely inherited from a Mesozoic arcuate structure or recently formed by Indian northward indentation and possibly related to syn-orogenic lateral extrusion. The vertical-axis counterclockwise rotations observed in the Tajik Basin are key constraints on testing these models, but the timing of these rotations remains hindered by poor age control on the basin sediments. We report a combined analysis of vertical-axis rotation and magnetostratigraphic dating of a long sedimentary section in the eastern Tajik Basin, which yields strong counterclockwise rotations (~56°) in early Late Cretaceous to late Miocene strata. This result suggests that rotation in the Tajik Basin occurred after ~8 Ma, much later than previously suggested. Combining with a regional compilation of previous paleomagnetic studies as well as structural and GPS constraints including Pamir and Tarim, we explore potential implications on models of the Pamir salient. We infer that after 8 Ma (probably even later), the Pamir (North, Central, and South) began to overthrust west- and northwest-ward, causing counterclockwise rotations in the Tajik Basin. This reconstruction allows for ~150 km of post-8 Ma northwestward indentation into the Tajik Basin, in agreement with coeval underthrusting of the Indian mantle lithosphere into Asia.</p>


1983 ◽  
Vol 20 (8) ◽  
pp. 1340-1344 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. T. A. Symons

The 198 Ma Guichon batholith outcrops in the southern end of the Intermontane Belt or composite Terrane I of the western North American Cordillera. Thermal demagnetization of specimens from 19 sites at 200, 450, and 560 °C isolates a stable primary component at 560 °C in 13 sites, giving a pole position of 347°W, 52°N (δp = 5°, δm = 9°). These data support earlier results obtained by the author that indicate the batholith has undergone a clockwise rotation about a vertical axis of ~43 ± 7°. They also show that the batholith has undergone northward motion of 13 ± 6°, which supports recent arguments that the terrane underwent 14 ± 2° of northward translation between Late Cretaceous and pre-Miocene time.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Peterman ◽  
Tomoyuki Mikami ◽  
Shinya Inoue

AbstractNipponites is a heteromorph ammonoid with a complex and unique morphology that obscures its mode of life and ethology. The seemingly aberrant shell of this Late Cretaceous nostoceratid seems deleterious. However, hydrostatic simulations suggest that this morphology confers several advantages for exploiting a quasi-planktic mode of life. Virtual, 3D models of Nipponites mirabilis were used to compute various hydrostatic properties through 14 ontogenetic stages. At each stage, Nipponites had the capacity for neutral buoyancy and was not restricted to the seafloor. Throughout ontogeny, horizontally facing to upwardly facing soft body orientations were preferred. These orientations were aided by the obliquity of the shell’s ribs, which were parallel to former positions of the aperture during life. Static orientations were somewhat fixed, inferred by stability values that are slightly higher than extant Nautilus. The initial open-whorled, planispiral phase is well suited to horizontal backwards movement with little rocking. Nipponites then deviates from this coiling pattern with a series of alternating U-shaped bends in the shell. This modification allows for proficient rotation about the vertical axis, while possibly maintaining the option for horizontal backwards movement by redirecting its hyponome. These particular hydrostatic properties likely result in a tradeoff between hydrodynamic streamlining, suggesting that Nipponites assumed a low energy lifestyle of slowly pirouetting in search for planktic prey. Each computed hydrostatic property influences the others in some way, suggesting that Nipponites maintained a delicate hydrostatic balancing act throughout its ontogeny in order to facilitate this mode of life.


2015 ◽  
Vol 425 (1) ◽  
pp. 213-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel Garcés ◽  
Jesús García-Senz ◽  
Josep Antón Muñoz ◽  
Berta López-Mir ◽  
Elisabet Beamud

2010 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 161-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edmund Wascher ◽  
C. Beste

Spatial selection of relevant information has been proposed to reflect an emergent feature of stimulus processing within an integrated network of perceptual areas. Stimulus-based and intention-based sources of information might converge in a common stage when spatial maps are generated. This approach appears to be inconsistent with the assumption of distinct mechanisms for stimulus-driven and top-down controlled attention. In two experiments, the common ground of stimulus-driven and intention-based attention was tested by means of event-related potentials (ERPs) in the human EEG. In both experiments, the processing of a single transient was compared to the selection of a physically comparable stimulus among distractors. While single transients evoked a spatially sensitive N1, the extraction of relevant information out of a more complex display was reflected in an N2pc. The high similarity of the spatial portion of these two components (Experiment 1), and the replication of this finding for the vertical axis (Experiment 2) indicate that these two ERP components might both reflect the spatial representation of relevant information as derived from the organization of perceptual maps, just at different points in time.


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