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Creators/Authors contains: "Schwartz, J"

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  1. The Late Cretaceous paleogeography of Southern California potentially plays a central role in resolving conflicting models for postulated large-magnitude dextral translations along the western margin of North America (the Baja-BC hypothesis) and the beginning of the Laramide orogeny. The Mt. Pinos sector of the Southern California Batholith provides a unique window into this time because it preserves evidence for a kinematically and temporally partitioned fault system that includes a ductile shear zone (the Tumamait shear zone) and a ductile-to-brittle thrust fault (the Sawmill thrust). These two structures accommodated intra-arc strain during the Late Cretaceous to Paleocene during three phases of deformation (D3-D5) that are superimposed on older (D1 and D2) structures. D1 structures only occur in Pre-Mesozoic rocks and provide a reference frame for understanding subsequent deformation phases. D2 structures form part of a previously unmapped dextral-normal shear zone that predates the Tumamait shear zone. The initiation of displacements within the Tumamait shear zone is recorded by the formation of D3 mylonites which everywhere record reverse-sinistral movement. Petrochronology of syn- D3 titanites give lower-intercept 206Pb/238U dates ranging from 77.0 to 74.0 Ma and upper amphibolite-facies temperatures ranging from 699 to 718°C. Subsequent folding of the D3 mylonites during D4 was synchronous with late-stage, peraluminous magmatism at ca. 70 Ma. Near the Sawmill thrust, the D4 event resulted in a S4 crenulation cleavage and asymmetric, overturned folds that record top-to-the-NE tectonic displacements. NE-directed thrusting along the Sawmill thrust occurred at 67-66 Ma is interpreted to have been kinematically linked to D4 deformation. This thrust placed upper plate rocks of the Southern California Batholith above the Late Cretaceous Pelona schist. We interpret deformational fabrics in the Mt. Pinos area to record a kinematically partitioned, transpressional system that involved sinistral-reverse shearing (D3) closely followed by folding and arc-directed thrusting (D4-D5). We speculate that D3 structures developed in response to opening of the Kula-Farallon plate boundary and we hypothesize that the Kula-Farallon-North American plate triple junction was located at the present-day location of the Garlock Fault at ca. 85 Ma thereby segmenting the arc at this location. This geometry resulted in in dextral shearing in the Sierra Nevada Batholith (and northward) and sinistral shearing in the Southern California Batholith and Baja California. Continued subduction of the Farallon plate beneath the Southern California Batholith led to a major arc flare-up event from 90-70 Ma which was associated with D3 sinistral transpression. We interpret D3-D5 structures to record oblique convergence and the underthrusting of the Hess oceanic plateau beneath the Southern California Batholith at ca. 70-66 Ma. Our model for the segmentation of the California arc is compatible with a moderate (1000-1600 km), ‘Sierra-BC’ translation model in which the Insular superterrane was located north of the Southern California Batholith in the Late Cretaceous. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 21, 2026
  2. Structural analyses combined with U‐Pb zircon petrochronology show the influence of arc magmatism on the evolution of two transpressional shear zones in the deep root of the Late Cretaceous Southern California batholith. The mid-crustal Black Belt and lower-crustal Cucamonga shear zones (eastern San Gabriel Mountains) formed at ~84 Ma shortly after a large mass of tonalite and granodiorite intruded the lower crust. Both shear zones were active until at least ~74 Ma and probably until 72-70 Ma. In the mid-crustal shear zone, rheological contrasts between mingling magmas localized deformation at dike margins. The deformation began as hypersolidus flow in partially crystallized dikes and then transitioned to deformation below the solidus when alternations between viscous creep and brittle faulting produced interlayered pseudotachylyte, cataclasite, and mylonite. As the dikes solidified, strain hardening drove shear zone growth and created thin (10-30 m) high-strain zones and faults that are widely spaced across ~1 km. In contrast, the lower-crustal Cucamonga shear zone was magma-starved, lacks the variety of shear zone fabrics exhibited by its mid-crustal counterpart, and formed by the reactivation of a pre-existing fabric that records pure reverse displacements at 124-93 Ma. The two shear zones created a partitioned style of intra-arc transpression where sinistral-reverse (mostly arc-parallel with some arc-oblique) displacements were accommodated on moderately dipping faults and shear zones and arc-normal shortening was accommodated by coeval folds. This study shows how a magmatic surge influenced the architecture and style of Late Cretaceous transpression in the Southern California batholith, including the evolution of high-strain zones that record alternating episodes of brittle, ductile, and hypersolidus deformation. The results illustrate how magmatism localizes strain on deep-crustal faults during orogenesis and oblique convergence. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 21, 2026
  3. The study of active fault zones is fundamental to understanding both long‐term tectonics and short‐term earthquake behavior. Here, we integrate lidar‐enabled geomorphic‐geologic mapping and petrochronological analysis to reveal the slip‐history, tectonic evolution, and structure of the southern Alpine Fault in New Zealand. New petrographic, zircon U‐Pb and zircon trace‐element data from fault‐displaced basement units provides constraint on ∟70–90 km of right‐lateral displacement on the presently active strand of the southern Alpine Fault, which we infer is of Plio‐Quaternary age. This incremental displacement has accumulated while the offshore part of the fault has evolved within a distributed zone of plate boundary deformation. We hypothesize that pre‐existing faults in the continental crust of the Pacific Plate have been exploited as components of this distributed plate boundary system. Along the onshore southern Alpine Fault, detailed mapping of active fault traces reveals complexity in geomorphic fault expression. Our analysis suggests that the major geomorphic features of the southern Alpine Fault correspond to penetrative fault zone structures. We emphasize the region immediately south of the central‐southern section boundary, where a major extensional stepover and restraining bend are located along‐strike of each other. We infer that this geometry may reflect segmentation of the Alpine Fault between two distinct fault segments. The ends of these proposed segments meet near where several Holocene earthquake ruptures have terminated. Our new constraints on the evolution and structure of the southern Alpine Fault help contribute to improved characterization of the greatest onshore source of earthquake hazard in New Zealand. 
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  4. The beginning of the Laramide orogeny is a pivotal time in the geological development of the western United States, but the driving mechanism responsible for mountain building, basin formation and ore mineralization is controversial. Most prominent models suggest this event was caused by the collision of an oceanic plateau with the Southern California Batholith sector of western North America at ca. 88 Ma which caused the angle of subduction beneath the continent to shallow. This subhorizontal (flat) subduction is thought to have led to shut-down of the arc, crustal cooling, and the formation of deep, basement-involved thrust faults that penetrated far into the continental interior. In contrast to these predictions, we show that the Southern California Batholith experienced a magmatic surge from 90 to 70 Ma, the lower crust was hot (835-750°C) and partially molten, and cooling occurred after 75 Ma. These data contradict plateau underthrusting as the driving mechanism for early Laramide deformation at 90-80 Ma; therefore, the Laramide orogeny cannot have been initiated by flat-slab subduction. We propose that the Laramide orogeny is best explained as a two-stage orogeny consisting of: 1) an arc magmatic ‘flare-up’ phase associated with sinistral-reverse ductile shearing in the Southern California Batholith from at 90-75 Ma and coeval dextral-transpression north of the Garlock fault, and 2) a widespread mountain building phase in the Laramide foreland belt from 75-50 Ma. Only that latter phase is linked to flat-slab subduction beneath the Southern California Batholith. 
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  5. The Southern California batholith contains a geologic record that can help clarify the timing of events that occurred during the Late Cretaceous (100-65 Ma) along the western margin of the North American Cordillera. The subduction of the oceanic conjugate Shatsky plateau beneath North America is postulated to have ended active magmatism in the arc at 88-70 Ma; however, the timing of this event is poorly constrained in Southern California. We use U-Pb laser ablation zircon petrochronology to document the timing and conditions of magmatism and metamorphism in the lower crust of the Cretaceous arc. We focus on the Cucamonga terrane in a part of the Southern California batholith located northeast of Los Angeles in the southeastern San Gabriel Mountains. These rocks contain exhumed lower crustal (7-9 kbar) rocks predominantly composed of granulite-facies metasedimentary rocks, migmatites, charnockite and dioritic to tonalitic gneiss. We report 20 new zircon dates from 11 samples, including 4 mafic biotite gneisses, 3 mylonitic tonalites, 2 charnockites, a quartzite, and a felsic pegmatite dike crosscutting granulite-facies metasedimentary rocks. New 206Pb/238U ages show that magmatism occurred in the Middle Jurassic (ca. 172-166 Ma), the Early Cretaceous (ca. 120-118 Ma), and the Late Cretaceous (88-86 Ma) at temperatures ranging from 740 to 800 oC. Granulite-facies metamorphism and partial melting of these rocks occurred during the 88-74 Ma interval at temperatures ranging from 730°C to 800oC. Our data indicate that high-temperature arc magmatism and granulite-facies metamorphism continued through the Late Cretaceous and overlapped in timing with postulated subduction of the conjugate Shatsky plateau from previous models. We speculate that termination of arc activity and cooling of the lower crust in response to plateau subduction must postdate ca. 74 Ma. 
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  6. Robles, F.; Schwartz, J.; Miranda, E.; Klepeis, K.; and Mora-Klepeis, G. (Ed.)
    Ancient basement rocks in Southern California contain mechanical anisotropies that may influence the architecture of Quaternary faulting. We study exposed basement rocks found within the southeastern San Gabriel lithotectonic block with the intention of reconciling the relationship between inherited ductile fabrics and the geometry of Quaternary faults that are part of the San Andreas Fault system. By focusing our study on the southeastern corner of the San Gabriel block we can study the exposed lower- to middle crustal shear zone fabrics near where the Cucamonga Fault and the San Jacinto Fault intersect. The brittle Quaternary Cucamonga Thrust Fault strikes E-W and dips to the north-northeast (35-25°) and is localized at the range front and cuts these older fabrics, however there is also brittle deformation distal from the fault that also affects the sequence of lower- to middle crustal (6-8 kbar) granulite- to upper amphibolite facies mylonite and granulite-facies metasedimentary rocks. Near the Cucamonga Fault, mylonitic fabrics strike E-W and dip northeast (40-50°). Quaternary brittle faults that strike E-W and dip northeast (30-40°) reactivate the mvlonites and slickenlines and record a sinistral, top-to-the-west sense of shear. Investigation of host rocks indicates that they formed in the roots of a continental arc which was active from the Middle Jurassic to Late Cretaceous (172-86 Ma) at 740-800°C. Ductile deformation was associated with granulite-facies metamorphism at approximately 30 km depth during the Late Cretaceous (88-74 Ma) at 730-800 °C. Our work shows that the exhumed Late Cretaceous mylonitic fabrics may have operated as stress guides during Quaternary faulting in the Cucamonga Fault zone. We conclude that these lower crustal fabrics influence the geometry and kinematics of late Cenozoic faulting of the Cucamonga and San Jacinto fault zones. 
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  7. We present >90 new igneous and metamorphic zircon and titanite petrochronology ages from the eastern Transverse Ranges of the Southern California Batholith (SCB) to investigate magmatic and tectonic processes in the frontal arc during postulated initiation of Late Cretaceous shallow-slab subduction. Our data cover >4000 km2 in the eastern Transverse Ranges and include data from Mesozoic plutons in the Mt. Pinos, Alamo Mountain, San Gabriel Mountain blocks, and the Eastern Peninsular mylonite zone. Igneous zircon data reveal 4 discrete pulses of magmatism at 258-220 Ma, 160-142 Ma, 120-118 Ma, and 90-66 Ma. The latter pulse involved a widespread magmatic surge in the SCB and coincided with garnet-granulite to upper amphibolite-facies metamorphism and partial melting in the lower crust (Cucamonga terrane, eastern San Gabriel Mountains). In this region, metamorphic zircons in gneisses, migmatites and calc-silicates record high-temperature metamorphism from 91 to 74 Ma at 9–7 kbars and 800–730°C. The Late Cretaceous arc flare-up was temporally and spatially associated with the development of a regionally extensive oblique sinistral-reverse shear system that includes from north to south (present-day) the Tumamait shear zone (Mt. Pinos), the Alamo Mountain-Piru Creek shear zone, the Black Belt shear zone (Cucamonga terrane), and the Eastern Peninsular Ranges shear zone. Syn-kinematic, metamorphic titanite ages in the Tumamait shear zone range from 77–74 Ma at 720–700°C, titanites in the Black Belt mylonite zone give an age of 83 Ma, and those in the eastern Peninsular Ranges mylonite zone give ages of 89–86 Ma at 680–670°C. These data suggest a progressive northward younging of ductile shearing at amphibolite- to upper-amphibolite-facies conditions from 88 to 74 Ma, which overlaps with the timing of the Late Cretaceous arc flare-up event. Collectively, these data indicate that arc magmatism, high-temperature metamorphism, and intra-arc contraction were active in the SCB throughout the Late Cretaceous. These observations appear to contradict existing models for the termination of magmatism and refrigeration of the arc due to underthrusting of the conjugate Shatsky rise starting at ca. 88 Ma. We suggest that shallow-slab subduction likely postdates ca. 74 Ma when high-temperature metamorphism ceased in the SCB. 
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  8. The way an object looks and sounds provide complementary reflections of its physical properties. In many settings cues from vision and audition arrive asynchronously but must be integrated, as when we hear an object dropped on the floor and then must find it. In this paper, we introduce a setting in which to study multi-modal object localization in 3D virtual environments. An object is dropped somewhere in a room. An embodied robot agent, equipped with a camera and microphone, must determine what object has been dropped -- and where -- by combining audio and visual signals with knowledge of the underlying physics. To study this problem, we have generated a large-scale dataset -- the Fallen Objects dataset -- that includes 8000 instances of 30 physical object categories in 64 rooms. The dataset uses the ThreeDWorld Platform that can simulate physics-based impact sounds and complex physical interactions between objects in a photorealistic setting. As a first step toward addressing this challenge, we develop a set of embodied agent baselines, based on imitation learning, reinforcement learning, and modular planning, and perform an in-depth analysis of the challenge of this new task. 
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  9. Ahmad Ibrahim (Ed.)
    The purpose of this paper is to detail the initial validation of a scale to assess engineering students’ attitudes toward the value of diversity in engineering and their intentions to enact inclusive behaviors. In study 1, we administered the scale four times. We subjected the first administration to exploratory factor analysis (EFA), and the remaining three administrations to both confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and tests of longitudinal measurement invariance (LMI). All tests indicated strong evidence for the internal structure of the factor structure of the survey. The four factors were: engineers should value diversity to (a) fulfill a greater purpose and (b) serve customers better; and engineers should (c) challenge discriminatory behavior and (d) promote a healthy work environment. In study 2, we again assessed the structure of the data as described in study 1 and then used the scale to assess potential differences between undergraduate students who participated in activities designed to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) (n=116) and those who did not (n=137). Students in the intervention classes demonstrated a small statistically significant increase in their intention to promote a healthy team environment in reference to the comparison classes. No differences were observed between the classes on the other factors. Future directions and implications are discussed. 
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  10. Over 500 km2 of rock exposure in Fiordland, New Zealand records strain localization processes accompanying the formation of a steep, transpressional shear zone within the root of a Cretaceous continental magmatic arc. Here, we pair field observations with microstructural and petrographic analyses of the George Sound shear zone (GSSZ) to investigate how metamorphism and compositional variability influenced shear zone evolution in the lower continental crust. The northern portion of the 50 km-long GSSZ deforms a monzodioritic pluton where superposed mineral fabrics record a narrowing of the shear zone width over time. Early stage deformation was accommodated mostly by dynamic recrystallization of pyroxene and plagioclase, forming a steep zone of coarse, gneissic foliations over 10 km wide. Subsequent deformation created a 2 km-thick zone of mylonite containing fine-grained plagioclase, hornblende, biotite, and quartz. The latter three minerals formed during the hydration of older minerals, including igneous pyroxene. The change in mineralogy and grain size also produced thin (< 1 mm), weak layers that localized deformation in shear bands in the highest strain zones. The southern ~35 km of the GSSZ deforms a heterogeneous section of granite, diorite, and metasedimentary rock. In this area, the hydration of igneous assemblages also is pervasive but is not restricted to high-strain zones. Instead, the shear zone branches into four ≤1 km-wide strands that closely follow lithologic contacts. The thinnest branch occurs at the contact of a coarse-grained, dioritic pluton and a fine-grained granitic pluton. These patterns suggest that the factors that controlled strain localization in the GSSZ vary along its length. In the north, where its host rock is homogeneous, retrograde metamorphism helped localized strain into shear bands at the micro scale, mirroring a narrowing at the km scale. In the south, lithologic contacts created weak zones that appear to have superseded the effects of metamorphism, creating a series of thin, branching high-strain zones. These results suggest that the rheology of lower-crustal shear zones also varies significantly along their length and over time. Both of these factors can be used to generate improved models of continental deformation. 
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