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Free, publicly-accessible full text available January 1, 2026
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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.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available February 18, 2026
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Titanite (CaTiSiO5) is a commonly occurring and versatile accessory mineral with broad applications in petrochronology. In situ U-Pb and trace element analyses via SIMS and LA-ICPMS are routinely performed using a matrix-matched reference material for U-Pb and standard glasses (non-matrix matched reference material) for elemental abundance determination. We report U-Pb isotopic ratios and major and trace element concentrations for three titanite samples (Ecstall, McClure and FCT) which are commonly used as reference materials in petrochronology studies. In addition, we characterize two new samples which can potentially serve as matrixmatched reference materials for titanite trace element geochemistry (BLR-2 and BRA-1). Based on electron microprobe analysis, samples BLR-1 and BLR-2 are homogeneous and suitable for use as a primary reference material for trace element concentrations. Whereas Ecstall, McClure, and FCT titanite reference materials show high intra-grain heterogeneity, yielding relative standard deviations for most trace elements between 5% and 40%, with higher standard deviations for U of 70% for Ecstall (n = 26), 265% for McClure (n = 22), and 202% for FCT (n = 26). Therefore, we suggest that these grains are unsuited to serve as reference materials for trace element quantification. The BRA-1 titanite has low trace element concentrations and is chemically heterogeneous (total REE abundances of 40 ppm for the rim and 95 ppm for the core of the grain), thus is not suitable for standardization of chemical composition using LA-ICPMS. It is commonly asserted that a matrix-matched standardization provides a more robust downhole fractionation correction compared to a non-matrix matched standardization. However, it remains unclear which standardization approach (matrix-matched vs non-matrix matched/glass) is more accurate for titanite trace element quantification. To resolve this, we tested several standardization approaches for trace element quantification, comparing matrix-matched (BLR-1) and nonmatrix- matched (NIST612) standardizations with different internal elemental standards (IES; Ca, Si and Ti) and without internal standardization (semi-quantitative). To provide an independent constraint on the accuracy of the various trace element standardization techniques we compared results to trace element concentrations obtained via solution Q-ICPMS on crushed BLR-2 and BRA-1 aliquots. The matrix-matched standardization using Si as the IES yields the best reproducibility of trace element concentrations followed by the matrix-matched reduction using Ti as the IES. Moreover, the matrix-matched semi-quantitative correction yielded the lowest weighted percentage of difference compared to reference trace composition quantified by solution ICPMS. Finally, in this contribution we also benchmark sampling-size for precise U-Pb dating of common-Pb rich phases like titanite.more » « less
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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.more » « less
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Uplift and amalgamation of the high-elevation (>3000 m) Tian Shan and Pamir ranges in Central Asia restricts westerly atmospheric flow and thereby limits moisture delivery to the leeward Taklimakan Desert in the Tarim Basin (<1500 m), the second largest modern sand dune desert on Earth. Although some research suggests that the hyper-arid conditions observed today in the Tarim Basin developed by ca. 25 Ma, stratigraphic evidence suggests the first erg system did not appear until 12.2 Ma. To address this controversy and to understand the tectonic influences on climate in Central Asia, we studied a continuous, 3800-m-thick stratigraphic section deposited from 15.1 to 0.9 Ma now exposed within the western Kepintagh fold-and-thrust belt in the southern Tian Shan foreland. We present new detrital zircon data (n = 839), new carbonate oxygen (δ18Oc) and carbon (δ13Cc) stable isotope compositions (n = 368), structural modeling, and stratigraphic observations, and combine these data with recently published magnetostratigraphy and regional studies to reconstruct the history of deposition, deformation, and climate change in the northwestern Tarim Basin. We find that basins along the southern (this study) and northern (i.e., Ili Basin) margins of the Tian Shan were likely receiving similar westerly precipitation by 15 Ma (δ18Oc = ∼−8‰) and had similar lacustrine-playa environments at ca. 13.5 Ma, despite differences in sedimentary provenance. At ca. 12 Ma, an erg desert formed adjacent to the southern Tian Shan in the northwestern Tarim Basin, coincident with a mid- to late Miocene phase of deformation and exhumation within both the Pamir and southern Tian Shan. Desertification at ca. 12 Ma was marked by a negative δ18Oc excursion from −7.8 ± 0.4‰ to −8.7 ± 0.7‰ in the southern Tian Shan foreland (this study), coeval with a negative δ18Oc excursion (∼−11 to −13‰) in the Tajik Basin, west of the Pamir. These data suggest that only after ca. 12 Ma did the Pamir-Tian Shan create a high-elevation barrier that effectively blocked westerly moisture, forming a rain shadow in the northwestern Tarim Basin. After 7 Ma, the southern Tian Shan foreland migrated southward as this region experienced widespread deformation. In our study area, rapid shortening and deformation above two frontal foreland faults initiated between 6.0 and 3.5 Ma resulted in positive δ13Cc excursions to values close to 0‰, which is interpreted to reflect exhumation in the Tian Shan and recycling of Paleozoic carbonates. Shortening led to isolation of the study site as a piggy-back basin by 3.5 Ma, when the sediment provenance was limited to the exhumed Paleozoic basement rocks of the Kepintagh fold belt. The abrupt sedimentologic and isotopic changes observed in the southern Tian Shan foreland appear to be decoupled from late Cenozoic global climate change and can be explained entirely by local tectonics. This study highlights how tectonics may overprint the more regional and global climate signals in active tectonic settings.more » « less
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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.more » « less
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Abstract The modern topography within the Laramide region consists of high‐relief ranges and high‐elevation low‐relief (HELR) surfaces separated by intraforeland basins. However, the timing and development of this topography within the type‐locality of the Wyoming Laramide province is poorly understood. Previous models suggest that the modern topography is a young feature that was acquired after Laramide tectonism, post‐Laramide burial, and basin evacuation; however, evidence of such a progression is sparse. We present low‐temperature‐thermochronological data from two Laramide uplifts in Wyoming, the Wind River and Bighorn Ranges, which document an early record of Laramide exhumation, subsequent reheating, and significant cooling after 10 Ma. Our results indicate that the Laramide ranges were buried by post‐Laramide Cenozoic basin fill, creating a low‐relief topography by the early Miocene that was reduced due to late Miocene regional incision and basin evacuation. We suggest that HELR surfaces experienced further relief reduction from Pleistocene glaciation.more » « less
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