Abstract The Pinaleño Mountains of southeastern Arizona is the eastern‐most metamorphic core complex in the southern U.S. and northern Mexican Cordillera. This study investigates the thermal history and exhumation record of the Pinaleño core complex using mica40Ar/39Ar, apatite and zircon (U‐Th)/He, and apatite fission‐track thermochronometers. The Pinaleño Mountains experienced two periods of rapid cooling during the Cenozoic. The first period, from ca. 27 to 21 Ma, records tectonic exhumation related to the development of the core complex and extensional shear zone. This period was followed by a relatively quiescent interval from 21 to 13.5 Ma that records little to no exhumation. The second period of rapid cooling, from 13.5 to 11 Ma, records tectonic exhumation related to high‐angle normal faulting, characteristic of the Basin and Range province. The exhumation timing of the Pinaleño core complex matches previously recognized spatiotemporal trends in the southern Basin and Range province and indicates that core complex exhumation in this region started in southeastern Arizona (ca. 32–33°N) and migrated both northward and southward. These trends correlate well with the latitude and timing of subduction of the Pacific‐Farallon spreading ridge and the migration of the Mendocino (northward) and Rivera (southward) triple junctions. Spatiotemporal core complex exhumation trends also correlate well with regional magmatism associated with the mid‐Cenozoic flare‐up, including syn‐extensional intrusive rocks found in the footwalls of core complexes.
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Laramide bulldozing of lithosphere beneath the Arizona transition zone, southwestern United States
Abstract The northwest-trending transition zone (TZ) in Arizona (southwestern United States) is an ~100-km-wide physiographic province that separates the relatively undeformed southwestern margin of the Colorado Plateau from the hyperextended Basin and Range province to the southwest. The TZ is widely depicted to have been a Late Cretaceous–Paleogene northeast-dipping erosional slope along which Proterozoic rocks were denuded but not significantly deformed. Our multi-method thermochronological study (biotite 40Ar/39Ar, zircon and apatite [U-Th-Sm]/He, and apatite fission track) of Proterozoic rocks in the Bradshaw Mountains of the west-central Arizona TZ reveals relatively rapid cooling (~10 °C/m.y.) from temperatures of >180 °C to <60 °C between ca. 70 and ca. 50 Ma. Given minimal ca. 70–50 Ma upper-crustal shortening in the TZ, we attribute cooling to exhumation driven by northeastward bulldozing of continental lower crust and mantle lithosphere beneath it by the Farallon flat slab. Bulldozing is consistent with contemporaneous (ca. 70–50 Ma) underplating and initial exhumation of Orocopia Schist to the southwest in western Arizona and Mesozoic garnet-clinopyroxenite xenoliths of possible Mojave batholith keel affinity in ca. 25 Ma TZ volcanic rocks.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2048656
- PAR ID:
- 10507768
- Publisher / Repository:
- Geological Society of America
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Geology
- Volume:
- 51
- Issue:
- 10
- ISSN:
- 0091-7613
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 952 to 956
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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