EVOLUTION OF THE NORTHERN SNAKE RANGE METAMORPHIC CORE COMPLEX, NEVADA: INTEGRATING FIELD, STRUCTURE, GEOCHRONOLOGIC, AND THERMOCHRONOLOGIC DATA SETS

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeff Lee ◽  
◽  
Terrence J. Blackburn ◽  
Scott M. Johnston
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. SQ73-SQ91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabor C. Tari ◽  
Ingrid Gjerazi ◽  
Bernhard Grasemann

In the border zone between Austria and Hungary, the Miocene extension of the Pannonian Basin was characterized by extreme, large-magnitude upper crustal extension accommodated along low-angle detachment faults. Although some of these prominent normal faults have already been described using 2D seismic data sets and well data on the Hungarian side, we offer the first systematic interpretation using the Austrian and Hungarian vintage seismic data sets acquired in the 1970s and 1980s. The refinement of the previously proposed metamorphic core complex (MCC) style, east-northeast–west-southwest-trending very high-strain extension provides a modern understanding of back-arc extension in this part of the Pannonian Basin system as the result of the collapse of the Alpine orogen. Although previous interpretations could not achieve the subsurface correlation of major structural elements across the border, we did systematically map these for the first time. Numerous exploration wells, drilled on both sides of the border, were integrated with reflection seismic data to differentiate between the lower versus upper plates of the major low-angle detachment faults, including the largest one responsible for the formation of the Rechnitz MCC. Based on our new interpretation, the regionally mapped Rechnitz detachment fault has an unexpectedly large subsurface extent, on the order of 1000 km2. Moreover, the unusually large number of industry 2D seismic profiles (approximately 50) used to map this and other prominent faults, in the Austrian and Hungarian sides, makes the Rechnitz MCC possibly the best constrained one in the world in terms of subsurface definition by reflection seismic data.


2017 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizard González-Becuar ◽  
Efrén Pérez-Segura ◽  
Ricardo Vega-Granillo ◽  
Luigi Solari ◽  
Carlos Manuel González-León ◽  
...  

Plutonic rocks of the Puerta del Sol area, in central Sonora, represent the extension to the south of the El Jaralito batholith, and are part of the footwall of the Sierra Mazatán metamorphic core complex, whose low-angle detachment fault bounds the outcrops of plutonic rocks to the west. Plutons in the area record the magmatic evolution of the Laramide arc and the Oligo-Miocene syn-extensional plutonism in Sonora. The basement of the area is composed by the ca. 1.68 Ga El Palofierral orthogneiss that is part of the Caborca block. The Laramide plutons include the El Gato diorite (71.29 ± 0.45 Ma, U-Pb), the El Pajarito granite (67.9 ± 0.43 Ma, U-Pb), and the Puerta del Sol granodiorite (49.1 ± 0.46 Ma, U-Pb). The younger El Oquimonis granite (41.78 ± 0.32 Ma, U-Pb) is considered part of the scarce magmatism that in Sonora records a transition to the Sierra Madre Occidental magmatic event. The syn-extensional plutons are the El Garambullo gabbro (19.83 ± 0.18 Ma, U-Pb) and the Las Mayitas granodiorite (19.2 ± 1.2 Ma, K-Ar). A migmatitic event that affected the El Palofierral orthogneiss, El Gato diorite, and El Pajarito granite between ca. 68 and 59 Ma might be related to the emplacement of the El Pajarito granite. The plutons are metaluminous to slightly peraluminous, with the exception of El Oquimonis granite, which is a peraluminous two-mica, garnet-bearing granite. They are mostly high-K calc-alkaline with nearly uniform chondrite-normalized REE and primitive-mantle normalized multielemental patterns that are characteristic of continental margin arcs and resemble patterns reported for other Laramide granites of Sonora. The Laramide and syn-extensional plutons also have Sr, Nd and Pb isotopic ratios that plot within the fields reported for Laramide granites emplaced in the Caborca terrane in northwestern and central Sonora. Nevertheless, and despite their geochemical affinity to continental magmatic arcs, the El Garambullo gabbro and Las Mayitas granodiorite are syn-extensional plutons that were emplaced at ca. 20 Ma during development of the Sierra Mazatán metamorphic core complex. The 40Ar/39Ar and K-Ar ages obtained for the El Palofierral orthogneiss, the Puerta del Sol granodiorite, the El Oquimonis granite, and the El Garambullo gabbro range from 26.3 ± 0.6 to 17.4 ± 1.0 Ma and are considered cooling ages associated with the exhumation of the metamorphic core complex.


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