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ABSTRACT The Santa Rosalía basin (Baja California Sur, México) contains a rich record of late Cenozoic volcanism, faulting, and sedimentation that provides a crucial constraint on the timing of marine flooding from the Pacific Ocean into the nascent Gulf of California oblique rift, yet the precise age of the basin is uncertain. Previous studies used reconnaissance paleomagnetic data and a 40Ar/39Ar age of 6.76 ± 0.90 Ma on the intrabasinal Cinta Colorada tuff to estimate a depositional age of ca. 7.2–6.3 Ma for the marine Boleo Formation and initial flooding of the central Gulf of California. Here, we present a large (n = 2091) detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology data set from the Boleo Formation that indicates a maximum depositional age of 6.35 ± 0.21 Ma for pumiceous sandstone at the base (below the basal limestone), a revised age of 5.86 ± 0.06 Ma for the Cinta Colorada tuff in the middle, and a maximum depositional age of 5.70 ± 0.21 Ma for the top. Detrital zircon age spectra suggest a local provenance for the Boleo Formation involving recycling from underlying Oligocene–Miocene strata in proximal source areas. Integration of detrital zircon ages with existing paleomagnetic data suggests that the lower ~30 m of the Boleo Formation accumulated during normal-polarity subchron C3An.1n (6.27–6.02 Ma), and the middle to upper Boleo Formation was deposited entirely during reverse-polarity chron C3r (6.02–5.24 Ma). We therefore reassign the depositional age span of the Boleo Formation to ca. 6.3–5.7 Ma. Although not preferred, a minimum-duration depositional model from ca. 6.1 to 5.8 Ma is also permissible if a consistently high sedimentation rate of ~0.4– 1.0 mm/yr is inferred. This revised younger age for the Boleo Formation implies marine incursion in the central Gulf of California at ca. 6.3 Ma, ~1 m.y. younger than previously thought. We envision that regional marine flooding occurred during a very short (<100 k.y.) event that inundated a narrow tectonic trough over a distance of at least ~1000 km along the plate boundary from the central Gulf of California to the Salton Trough and reaching into the present-day Lower Colorado River Valley. This study also demonstrates the utility of large-volume and large-n detrital zircon studies in establishing the ages of sedimentary successions deposited over very short time spans (<1 m.y.) and/or during relative lulls in magmatism and geomagnetic reversals.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available June 18, 2026
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For nearly 30 years, biologists have documented a striking pattern of intra-species genetic divergence on the Baja California peninsula in dozens of disparate species. Evolutionary theory predicts that when such a pattern is shared among species the cause is extrinsic (e.g., environmental, climatic, physiographic, geological). The leading hypothesis within biological literature has been that genetic divergence was facilitated by flooding across the central peninsula by a seaway between ~3-1 Ma, resulting in separation of northern and southern populations. However, new detailed geologic mapping from the Baja GeoGenomics consortium reveals evidence for continuous terrestrial environments during the last ~30 Myr in a ≥40-km-wide ~E-W region of the central peninsula that straddles the modern-day crest, conclusively refuting the seaway hypothesis. Through integration of tectonic, volcanic, and sedimentological evidence with genomic (DNA) and gene expression (RNA) data for plants and animals, we are developing a new working model for Earth-life evolution on the peninsula over the last ~5 Myr. In this model, rift-related uplift drives the growth and dissection of topography, causing increased microenvironmental heterogeneity that populations differentially adapted to in the north and south. This is evidenced by widespread, statistically significant niche divergence in populations between northern and southern Baja in 21 studied taxa. This pattern is supported by strong differences in gene expression in northern and southern populations of two lizard species, particularly in genes relating to metabolism, which may indicate different diet or energy requirements between the regions. Habitats in the north and south then shifted due to glacial and interglacial periods, indicated by hindcasting the estimated niche conditions of those 21 taxa. With ongoing analyses, we expect to find genomic signatures of differential natural selection and adaptation within these species due in part to monsoon-driven rainfall differences. The significance of this work is twofold: it demonstrates the importance of incorporating geological data into evolutionary hypotheses and it cautions how mis-assigning cause-effect relationships in individual Earth-life systems can bias our fundamental understanding of how Earth processes shape biological evolution writ large.more » « less
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Volcanic rocks of the Sierra San Francisco (SSF), in northern Baja California Sur, Mexico, record post-subduction magmatism related to slab melting and slab window opening. The range is composed of andesitic and dacitic domes, mafic lavas, and volcaniclastic deposits (debris and block-and-ash-flow, lahar, and fluvial) that constitute the proximal to distal facies of a volcanic field with local eruptive ages that postdate the regional transition from subduction to transtension. Lowest observed volcanic units consist of interbedded and hydrothermally altered mafic lavas, tuff breccias, and andesite/dacite domes. These are overlain by volcaniclastic units and dacite domes that erupted between ~11-10 Ma. Volcaniclastic deposits comprise a section up to 800 m thick, locally flank and dip radially away from domes, and are likely associated with dome collapse. These deposits are unconformably overlain by a series of ~5.5-4.5 Ma Mg-enriched basaltic andesites (bajaites) that typically erupted along NNW-trending normal faults. Low interbedded mafic lavas are chemically similar to syn-subduction lavas (>15 Ma) SE of the SSF, suggesting a typical subduction supraslab mantle source during waning, late Miocene Farallon plate subduction. ~11-10 Ma dacite domes and debris flow blocks display an adakitic geochemical signature, implying an origin involving late Miocene foundering and melting of the edges of the subducted Farallon plate during the opening of a slab window after the 12.3 Ma transition from subduction to transtension. Adakitic rocks of the SSF and the Santa Clara volcanic field 60 km to the SW may constrain the E-W extent of the slab window. The ~5.5-4.5 Ma bajaites display enriched REE and trace element patterns, potentially resulting from the rise of enriched subslab mantle through the slab window and interaction with supraslab mantle, previously metasomatized by slab melts. Thermal pulses associated with Gulf of California rifting may have provided the heat to generate Mg-rich magmas which ascended along rift-related faults, precluding significant crustal contamination or fractionation, and allowing magmas to retain their primitive character. Further analysis will elucidate the timing of slab window development and the post-subduction mantle processes that drove the chemical evolution of SSF magmas.more » « less
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Abstract Lateral movement of lithospheric fragments along strike-slip faults in response to collision (escape tectonics) has characterized convergent settings since the onset of plate tectonics and is a mechanism for the formation of new plates. The Anatolian plate was created by the sequential connection of strike-slip faults following ≥10 m.y. of distributed deformation that ultimately localized into plate-bounding faults. Thermochronology data and seismic images of lithosphere structure near the East Anatolian fault zone (EAFZ) provide insights into the development of the new plate and escape system. Low-temperature thermochronology ages of rocks in and near the EAFZ are significantly younger than in other fault zones in the region, e.g., apatite (U-Th)/He: 11–1 Ma versus 27–13 Ma. Young apatite (U-Th)/He ages and thermal history modeling record thermal resetting along the EAFZ over the past ~5 m.y. and are interpreted to indicate thermal activity triggered by strike-slip faulting in the EAFZ as it formed as a through-going, lithosphere-scale structure. The mechanism for EAFZ formation may be discerned from S-wave velocity images from the Continental Dynamics–Central Anatolian Tectonics (CD-CAT) seismic experiment. These images indicate that thin but strong Arabian lithospheric mantle extends ~50–150 km north beneath Anatolian crust and would have been located near the present surficial location of the Bitlis-Zagros suture zone (co-located with the EAFZ in our study area) at ca. 5 Ma. Underthrusting of strong Arabian lithosphere facilitated localization of the EAFZ and thus was a fundamental control on the formation of the Anatolian plate and escape system.more » « less
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The Sierra San Francisco (SSF) is a Neogene volcanic range along the topographic crest of the Baja California peninsula in northern Baja California Sur, Mexico. The SSF is ~55 km long (NW-SE) and ~30 km wide and its highest peaks exceed 1500 m elevation. The SSF has a long history of volcanism and has been eroded by deep, rugged, radially-draining canyons. The development of SSF topography is intimately associated with the volcanic evolution of the range. The SSF is a large and complex dacitic adakite dome complex largely built of a thick, up to 800 m, stratigraphic succession of dacitic tuff breccias with minor interbedded basaltic andesite lavas. These deposits overlie rare exposures of aeolian sandstone of unknown age. The tuff breccias represent block-and-ash-flows and lahars generated from steep-sided peleean dacite and andesite domes, with three radiometric dates of 11-10 Ma. This intermediate sequence is unconformably capped by widespread bajaite mafic lavas, 5.5-4.5 Ma. SSF topography evolved dramatically since the late Miocene: 1) From 11-10 Ma, adakite domes erupted across the central SSF, locally along NNW faults. Thick sequences of bedded tuff breccias accumulated around the domes and are radially inclined away from source domes. The duration of this volcanism is unknown. 2) From 10-5 Ma, deep erosion of the pyroclastic strata formed a range-wide radial drainage network, with channel depths of up to 130 m or more. 3) From 5.5-4.5 Ma, voluminous bajaite lavas from cinder cones and dike vents flooded the top of the range and flowed down the radial drainages with flow distances up to 12 km. Vents are strongly aligned along steep NNW normal faults. 4) After 4.5 Ma, erosion removed interfluves of tuff breccia not armored by younger mafic lavas. Today, the long, steep-sided, lava-capped ridges are inverted topographically. At Santa Martha, an area in the central SSF with the highest concentration of domes, hydrothermal alteration of the volcanic deposits during and after the dome volcanism caused severe material weakening and slope failure within the volcanic center. The area is now a distinctive erosional basin, partly filled with clay-rich landslide deposits. Comparable volcanic history and topographic development are likely to have occurred in a dome field of similar age and size at Santa Agueda, 60 km SE of Santa Martha.more » « less
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