scholarly journals Jurassic–Cenozoic tectonics of the Pequop Mountains, NE Nevada, in the North American Cordillera hinterland

Geosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew V. Zuza ◽  
Christopher D. Henry ◽  
Seth Dee ◽  
Charles H. Thorman ◽  
Matthew T. Heizler

The Ruby Mountains–East Humboldt Range–Wood Hills–Pequop Mountains (REWP) metamorphic core complex, northeast Nevada, exposes a record of Mesozoic contraction and Cenozoic extension in the hinterland of the North American Cordillera. The timing, magnitude, and style of crustal thickening and succeeding crustal thinning have long been debated. The Pequop Mountains, comprising Neoproterozoic through Triassic strata, are the least deformed part of this composite metamorphic core complex, compared to the migmatitic and mylonitized ranges to the west, and provide the clearest field relationships for the Mesozoic–Cenozoic tectonic evolution. New field, structural, geochronologic, and thermochronological observations based on 1:24,000-scale geologic mapping of the northern Pequop Mountains provide insights into the multi-stage tectonic history of the REWP. Polyphase cooling and reheating of the middle-upper crust was tracked over the range of <100 °C to 450 °C via novel 40Ar/39Ar multi-diffusion domain modeling of muscovite and K-feldspar and apatite fission-track dating. Important new observations and interpretations include: (1) crosscutting field relationships show that most of the contractional deformation in this region occurred just prior to, or during, the Middle-Late Jurassic Elko orogeny (ca. 170–157 Ma), with negligible Cretaceous shortening; (2) temperature-depth data rule out deep burial of Paleozoic stratigraphy, thus refuting models that incorporate large cryptic overthrust sheets; (3) Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Eocene intrusions and associated thermal pulses metamorphosed the lower Paleozoic–Proterozoic rocks, and various thermochronometers record conductive cooling near original stratigraphic depths; (4) east-draining paleovalleys with ~1–1.5 km relief incised the region before ca. 41 Ma and were filled by 41–39.5 Ma volcanic rocks; and (5) low-angle normal faulting initiated after the Eocene, possibly as early as the late Oligocene, although basin-generating extension from high-angle normal faulting began in the middle Miocene. Observed Jurassic shortening is coeval with structures in the Luning-Fencemaker thrust belt to the west, and other strain documented across central-east Nevada and Utah, suggesting ~100 km Middle-Late Jurassic shortening across the Sierra Nevada retroarc. This phase of deformation correlates with terrane accretion in the Sierran forearc, increased North American–Farallon convergence rates, and enhanced Jurassic Sierran arc magmatism. Although spatially variable, the Cordilleran hinterland and the high plateau that developed across it (i.e., the hypothesized Nevadaplano) involved a dynamic pulsed evolution with significant phases of both Middle-Late Jurassic and Late Cretaceous contractional deformation. Collapse long postdated all of this contraction. This complex geologic history set the stage for the Carlin-type gold deposit at Long Canyon, located along the eastern flank of the Pequop Mountains, and may provide important clues for future exploration.

2019 ◽  
Vol 132 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 198-214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew S. Canada ◽  
Elizabeth J. Cassel ◽  
Daniel F. Stockli ◽  
M. Elliot Smith ◽  
Brian R. Jicha ◽  
...  

AbstractBasins in orogenic hinterlands are directly coupled to crustal thickening and extension through landscape processes and preserve records of deformation that are unavailable in footwall rocks. Following prolonged late Mesozoic–early Cenozoic crustal thickening and plateau construction, the hinterland of the Sevier orogen of western North America underwent late Cenozoic extension and formation of metamorphic core complexes. While the North American Cordillera is one of Earth’s best-studied orogens, estimates for the spatial and temporal patterns of initial extensional faulting differ greatly and thus limit understanding of potential drivers for deformation. We employed (U-Th)/(He-Pb) double dating of detrital zircon and (U-Th)/He thermochronology of detrital apatite from precisely dated Paleogene terrestrial strata to quantify the timing and magnitude of exhumation and explore the linkages between tectonic unroofing and basin evolution in northeastern Nevada. We determined sediment provenance and lag time evolution (i.e., the time between cooling and deposition, which is a measure of upper-crustal exhumation) during an 8 m.y. time span of deposition within the Eocene Elko Basin. Fluvial strata deposited between 49 and 45 Ma yielded Precambrian (U-Th)/He zircon cooling ages (ZHe) with 105–740 m.y. lag times dominated by unreset detrital ages, suggesting limited exhumation and Proterozoic through early Eocene sediment burial (<4–6 km) across the region. Minimum nonvolcanic detrital ZHe lag times decreased to <100 m.y. in 45–43 Ma strata and to <10 m.y. in 43–41 Ma strata, illustrating progressive and rapid hinterland unroofing in Eocene time. Detrital apatite (U-Th)/He ages present in ca. 44 and 39 Ma strata record Eocene cooling ages with 1–20 m.y. lag times. These data reflect acceleration of basement exhumation rates by >1 km/m.y., indicative of rapid, large-magnitude extensional faulting and metamorphic core complex formation. Contemporaneous with this acceleration of hinterland exhumation, syntectonic freshwater lakes developed in the hanging wall of the Ruby Mountains–East Humboldt Range metamorphic core complex at ca. 43 Ma. Volcanism driven by Farallon slab removal migrated southward across northeastern Nevada, resulting in voluminous rhyolitic eruptions at 41.5 and 40.1 Ma, and marking the abrupt end of fluvial and lacustrine deposition across much of the Elko Basin. Thermal and rheologic weakening of the lithosphere and/or partial slab removal likely initiated extensional deformation, rapidly unroofing deeper crustal levels. We attribute the observed acceleration in exhumation, expansion of sedimentary basins, and migrating volcanism across the middle Eocene to record the thermal and isostatic effects of Farallon slab rollback and subsequent removal of the lowermost mantle lithosphere.


Tectonics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Raphaël Gottardi ◽  
Ryan McAleer ◽  
Gabriele Casale ◽  
Megan Borel ◽  
Alexander Iriondo ◽  
...  

Nature ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 361 (6407) ◽  
pp. 56-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard F. Livaccari ◽  
John W. Geissman ◽  
Stephen J. Reynolds

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikolaus Froitzheim ◽  
Linus Klug

<p>The Permian was a time of strong crustal extension in the area of the later-formed Alpine orogen. This involved extensional detachment faulting and the formation of metamorphic core complexes. We describe (1) an area in the Southern Alps (Valsassina, Orobic chain) where a metamorphic core complex and detachment fault have been preserved and only moderately overprinted by Alpine collisional shortening, and (2) an area in the Austroalpine (Schneeberg) where Alpine deformation and metamorphism are intense but a Permian low-angle normal fault is reconstructed from the present-day tectonometamorphic setting. In the Southern Alps case, the Grassi Detachment Fault represents a low-angle detachment capping a metamorphic core complex in the footwall which was affected by upward‐increasing, top‐to‐the‐southeast mylonitization. Two granitoid intrusions occur in the core complex, c. 289 Ma and c. 287 Ma, the older of which was syn-tectonic with respect to the extensional mylonites (Pohl, Froitzheim, et al., 2018, Tectonics). Consequently, detachment‐related mylonitic shearing took place during the Early Permian and ended at ~288 Ma, but kinematically coherent brittle faulting continued. Considering 30° anticlockwise rotation of the Southern Alps since Early Permian, the extension direction of the Grassi Detachment Fault was originally ~N‐S and the sense of transport top-South. In this area, there is no evidence of Permian strike-slip faulting but only of extension. In the Schneeberg area of the Austroalpine, a unit of Early Paleozoic metasediments with only Eoalpine (Cretaceous) garnet, the Schneeberg Complex, overlies units with two-phased (Variscan plus Eoalpine) garnet both to the North (Ötztal Complex) and to the South (Texel Complex). The basal contact of the Schneeberg Complex was active as a north-directed thrust during the Eoalpine orogeny. It reactivated a pre-existing, post-Variscan but pre-Mesozoic, i.e. Permian low-angle normal fault. This normal fault had emplaced the Schneeberg Complex with only low Variscan metamorphism (no Variscan garnet) on an amphibolite-facies metamorphic Variscan basement. The original normal fault dipped south or southeast, like the Grassi detachment in the Southern Alps. As the most deeply subducted units of the Eoalpine orogen (e.g. Koralpe, Saualpe, Pohorje) are also the ones showing the strongest Permian rift-related magmatism, we hypothesize that the Eoalpine subduction was localized in a deep Permian rift system within continental crust.</p>


1992 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 972-983 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. Friedman

The Tatla Lake metamorphic complex (TLMC) is a metamorphic core complex located along the western edge of the Intermontane Belt in southwestern interior British Columbia. Low- to moderate-angle normal faults separate lower plate greenschist- and amphibolite-grade, highly strained, commonly mylonitic rocks from unstrained to weakly deformed strata of the upper plate. The lower plate is divided into a core of granoblastic gneiss and migmatitic tonalite and an overlying, 1–2.5+ km thick mylonitic package called the ductilely sheared assemblage (DSA). Amphibolite-grade metamorphism of the gneissic core (Mc) largely accompanied the development and folding of gneissic layering (ca. 107–79 Ma). Eocene (ca. 55–47 Ma) fabric and mineral assemblages in the DSA (Ms) obscure any earlier history. Three metamorphic zones are observed within southern DSA metapelites with increasing structural depth: chlorite–biotite, garnet–staurolite, and garnet–staurolite–kyanite–sillimanite. The middle zone is about 300 m thick; the latter zone is now about 4 km below low-grade upper plate rocks, indicating late- or post-Ds metamorphic omission. DSA P–T conditions are calculated with the garnet–biotite thermometer and garnet–Al2SiO5–quartz–plagioclase (GASP) and total Al in hornblende barometers. Southern DSA metapelites record Eocene Ms conditions of 480–619 °C (± 50 °C), generally increasing with depth. One sample gave a calculated P–T of 0.72 ± 0.15 GPa and 500 ± 50 °C. P–T data from this area suggest that up to 10 km of structural section may be missing. Zoned garnet (pre-Ds) core to rim GASP pressures of 0.70–0.36 ± 0.15 GPa, for an outcrop-sized pelitic xenolith within a Late Cretaceous tonalitic body (U–Pb: 71 Ma) in the northwestern DSA, record its ascent during pluton emplacement and subsequent Eocene tectonic uplift. A total Al in hornblende crystallization pressure of 0.54 ± 0.1 GPa was calculated for the surrounding body. Biotite and hornblende K–Ar dates of 53.4–45.6 Ma for DSA and gneissic core rocks record cooling of the lower plate through the 530–280 °C (± 40 °C) interval. Mc metamorphism in the gneissic core is thought to have developed in response to crustal thickening and compression, beneath a regional mid-Cretaceous thrust belt. Characteristics of Eocene Ms metamorphism in the DSA, such as truncated and thinned metamorphic zones, are consistent with development during extensional tectonic exhumation of the lower plate.


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