Western North America is the archetypical Cordilleran orogenic system that preserves a Mesozoic to Cenozoic record of oceanic Farallon plate subduction-related processes. After prolonged Late Jurassic through mid-Cretaceous normal-angle Farallon plate subduction that produced the western North American batholith belt and retroarc fold-thrust belt, a period of low-angle, flat-slab subduction during Late Cretaceous−Paleogene time caused upper plate deformation to migrate eastward in the form of the Laramide basement-involved uplifts, which partitioned the original regional foreland basin. Major questions persist about the mechanism and timing of flat-slab subduction, the trajectory of the flat-slab, inter-plate coupling mechanism(s), and the upper-plate deformational response to such processes. Critical for testing various flat-slab hypotheses are the timing, rate, and distribution of exhumation experienced by the Laramide uplifts as recorded by low-temperature thermochronology. In this contribution, we address the timing of regional exhumation of the Laramide uplifts by combining apatite fission-track (AFT) and (U-Th-Sm)/He (AHe) data from 29 new samples with 564 previously published AFT, AHe, and zircon (U-Th)/He ages from Laramide structures in Arizona, Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, Montana, and South Dakota, USA. We integrate our results with existing geological constraints and with new regional cross sections to reconstruct the spatial and temporal history of exhumation driven by Laramide deformation from the mid-Cretaceous to Paleogene. Our analysis suggests a two-stage exhumation of the Laramide province, with an early phase of localized exhumation occurring at ca. 100−80 Ma in Wyoming and Montana, followed by a more regional period of exhumation at ca. 70−50 Ma. Generally, the onset of enhanced exhumation occurs earlier in the northern Laramide province (ca. 90 Ma) and later in the southern Laramide province (ca. 80 Ma). Thermal history models of selected samples along regional cross sections through Utah−Arizona−New Mexico and Wyoming−South Dakota show that exhumation occurred contemporaneously with deformation, implying that Laramide basement block exhumation is coupled with regional deformation. These results have implications for testing proposed migration pathway models of Farallon flat-slab and for how upper-plate deformation is expressed in flat-slab subduction zones in general.
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Post-Laramide Extension and Erosion in the Madison and Gallatin Ranges of Southwest Montana from Apatite (U-Th-Sm)/He Thermochronometry
Abstract Since the end of the Laramide Orogeny (~50 Ma), southwest Montana has experienced complex tectonic, climatic, volcanic, and mantle dynamic processes that have left an imprint on the landscape. Here, we examine the impact of post-orogenic and recent hotspot-related processes on the landscape by quantifying the Cenozoic exhumation history of the Madison and Gallatin Ranges, located on the northern flank of the Yellowstone hotspot (YSH) in southwest Montana. We apply the apatite (U-Th-Sm)/He (AHe) thermochronometer to Cretaceous and Paleogene intrusions from three transects to constrain the Cenozoic cooling history. We also present three new zircon U-Pb crystallization ages. AHe dates from 16 samples produced dates ranging from 67 ± 8.3 Ma to 6.2 ± 0.76 Ma. Most dates are between 45 and 20 Ma and younger than their crystallization age. Samples from the elevation transect with the largest relief display a positive relationship between AHe date and elevation, and thermal history modeling shows a phase of exhumation from ~30–23 Ma. AHe dates in the Madison Range young as they approach the Madison Fault, the range-bounding normal fault, and we ascribe most of the exhumation in the Madison Range to extension and tectonic exhumation due to footwall uplift. We interpret the ~30–23 Ma cooling to represent fault initiation and a phase of Oligocene extension that shows that post-orogenic extensional faulting and collapse propagated into the Laramide domain at that time. Late Miocene AHe dates near the fault represent a renewed phase of motion in the Miocene to recent, though our data lack the resolution to constrain the specific timing. Erosional exhumation due to YSH-driven regional uplift appears to be minimal.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2126373
- PAR ID:
- 10673526
- Publisher / Repository:
- GeoScienceWorld
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Lithosphere
- Volume:
- 2026
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 1941-8264
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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