Constraints on the post-orogenic tectonic history along the Salmon River suture zone from low-temperature thermochronology, western Idaho and eastern Oregon

2020 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-54
Author(s):  
Maureen Kahn ◽  
Annia K. Fayon ◽  
Basil Tikoff

ABSTRACT The abrupt boundary between accreted terranes and cratonic North America is well exposed along the Salmon River suture zone in western Idaho and eastern Oregon. To constrain the post-suturing deformation of this boundary, we assess the cooling history using zircon and apatite (U–Th)/He thermochronology. Pre-Miocene granitic rocks, along a regional transect, were sampled from accreted terranes of the Blue Mountains Province to cratonic North America (Idaho batholith). Each sample was taken from a known structural position relative to a paleotopographic surface represented by the basal unit of the Miocene Columbia River basalts. An isopach map constructed for the Imnaha Basalt, the basal member of the Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG), confirms the presence of a Miocene paleocanyon parallel to the northern part of Hells Canyon. The (U–Th)/He zircon dates indicate mostly Cretaceous cooling below 200°C, with the ages getting generally younger from west to east. The (U–Th)/He apatite dates indicate Late Cretaceous–Paleogene cooling, which post-dates tectonism associated with the western Idaho shear zone (WISZ). However, (U–Th)/He apatite dates younger than the Imnaha Basalt, with one date of 3.4 ± 0.6 Ma, occur at the bottom of Hells Canyon. These young (U–Th)/He apatite dates occur along the trend of the Miocene paleocanyon, and cannot be attributed to local exhumation related to faults. We propose that burial of Mesozoic basement rocks by the Columbia River basalts occurred regionally. However, the only samples currently exposed at the Earth’s surface that were thermally reset by this burial were at the bottom of the Miocene paleocanyon. If so, exhumation of these samples must have occurred by river incision in the last 4 million years. Thus, the low-temperature thermochronology data record a combination of Late Cretaceous–Paleogene cooling after deformation along the WISZ that structurally overprinted the suture zone and Neogene cooling associated with rapid river incision.

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sourav Krishna Nandi ◽  
◽  
Kevin L. Mickus ◽  
Matthew P. McKay

Author(s):  
Trevor S. Waldien ◽  
Sarah M. Roeske ◽  
Jeffrey A. Benowitz ◽  
Evan Twelker ◽  
Meghan S. Miller

Terrane accretion forms lithospheric-scale fault systems that commonly experience long and complex slip histories. Unraveling the evolution of these suture zone fault systems yields valuable information regarding the relative importance of various upper crustal structures and their linkage through the lithosphere. We present new bedrock geologic mapping and geochronology data documenting the geologic evolution of reactivated shortening structures and adjacent metamorphic rocks in the Alaska Range suture zone at the inboard margin of the Wrangellia composite terrane in the eastern Alaska Range, Alaska, USA. Detrital zircon uranium-lead (U-Pb) age spectra from metamorphic rocks in our study area reveal two distinct metasedimentary belts. The Maclaren schist occupies the inboard (northern) belt, which was derived from terranes along the western margin of North America during the mid- to Late Cretaceous. In contrast, the Clearwater metasediments occupy the outboard (southern) belt, which was derived from arcs built on the Wrangellia composite terrane during the Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous. A newly discovered locality of Alaska-type zoned ultramafic bodies within the Clearwater metasediments provides an additional link to the Wrangellia composite terrane. The Maclaren and Clearwater metasedimentary belts are presently juxtaposed by the newly identified Valdez Creek fault, which is an upper crustal reactivation of the Valdez Creek shear zone, the Late Cretaceous plate boundary that initially brought them together. 40Ar/39Ar mica ages reveal independent post-collisional thermal histories of hanging wall and footwall rocks until reactivation localized on the Valdez Creek fault after ca. 32 Ma. Slip on the Valdez Creek fault expanded into a thrust system that progressed southward to the Broxson Gulch fault at the southern margin of the suture zone and eventually into the Wrangellia terrane. Detrital zircon U-Pb age spectra and clast assemblages from fault-bounded Cenozoic gravel deposits indicate that the thrust system was active during the Oligocene and into the Pliocene, likely as a far-field result of ongoing flat-slab subduction and accretion of the Yakutat microplate. The Valdez Creek fault was the primary reactivated structure in the suture zone, likely due to its linkage with the reactivated boundary zone between the Wrangellia composite terrane and North America in the lithospheric mantle.


Tectonics ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 124-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jane Selverstone ◽  
Brian P. Wernicke ◽  
Elaine A. Aliberti

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