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  1. Late Cretaceous to Paleogene contractional deformation in the southern U.S. Cordillera is commonly attributed to the Laramide Orogeny, in part because of the prevalence of moderate- to high-angle, basement-involved reverse faults. However, it is unclear if the tectonic models developed for the archetypal Laramide foreland belt in the U.S. Rocky Mountain region are applicable to the southern U.S. Cordillera. New geologic mapping of the northern Chiricahua Mountains in southeast Arizona, USA, indicates the presence of an originally sub-horizontal thrust fault, the Fort Bowie fault, and a thin-skinned ramp-flat thrust system that is offset by a younger thrust fault, the Apache Pass fault, that carries basement rocks. Cross-cutting relationships and new geochronologic data indicate deformation on both faults occurred between 60 Ma and 35 Ma. A biotite 40Ar/39Ar plateau age of 48 Ma from the hanging wall of the basement-involved Apache Pass fault is interpreted to record erosion related to reverse fault movement and rock uplift. The presence of thrust faults in southeast Arizona raises the possibility of a latest Cretaceous−Eocene retroarc orogenic wedge that linked the Sevier and Mexican thrust belts to the north and south, respectively. Basement-involved deformation does not rule out the presence of a retroarc wedge, and many Cordilleran orogenic systems include basement-involved thrusting. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 13, 2025
  2. Narrative data spans all disciplines and provides a coherent model of the world to the reader or viewer. Recent advancement in machine learning and Large Language Models (LLMs) have enable great strides in analyzing natural language. However, Large language models (LLMs) still struggle with complex narrative arcs as well as narratives containing conflicting information. Recent work indicates LLMs augmented with external knowledge bases can improve the accuracy and interpretability of the resulting models. In this work, we analyze the effectiveness of applying knowledge graphs (KGs) in understanding true-crime podcast data from both classical Natural Language Processing (NLP) and LLM approaches. We directly compare KG-augmented LLMs (KGLLMs) with classical methods for KG construction, topic modeling, and sentiment analysis. Additionally, the KGLLM allows us to query the knowledge base in natural language and test its ability to factually answer questions. We examine the robustness of the model to adversarial prompting in order to test the model's ability to deal with conflicting information. Finally, we apply classical methods to understand more subtle aspects of the text such as the use of hearsay and sentiment in narrative construction and propose future directions. Our results indicate that KGLLMs outperform LLMs on a variety of metrics, are more robust to adversarial prompts, and are more capable of summarizing the text into topics. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 1, 2025
  3. Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 30, 2025
  4. Zelnio, Edmund; Garber, Frederick D. (Ed.)
  5. 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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  6. null (Ed.)
    The Orocopia Schist and related schists are sediments subducted during the Laramide orogeny and are thought to have been underplated as a laterally extensive layer at the base of the crust in the southwestern United States Cordillera. This concept is hard to reconcile with the existence of continental mantle lithosphere in southeastern California and western Arizona. Analytical solutions and numerical modeling suggest that the Orocopia Schist may have ascended through the mantle lithosphere as sediment diapirs or subsolidus crustal plumes to become emplaced in the middle to lower crust. Modeled time-temperature cooling paths are consistent with the exhumation history of the Orocopia Schist and explain an initial period of rapid cooling shortly after peak metamorphism. The Orocopia Schist represents a potential example of relaminated sediment observable at the surface. 
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  7. Granitic rocks, interpreted to be related to crustal melting, were emplaced into regions of thickened crust in southern Arizona during the Laramide orogeny (80–40 Ma). Laramide-age anatectic rocks are exposed as plutons, sills, and dike networks that are commonly found in the exhumed footwalls of metamorphic core complexes. This study investigates newly discovered exposures of granodioritic–leucogranitic rocks from three intrusive phases in the footwall of the Pinaleño–Jackson Mountain metamorphic core complex of southeastern Arizona, called the Relleno suite. Zircon U–Pb geochronology indicates that the suite was emplaced from 58 to 52 Ma. Zircon Lu/Hf isotope geochemistry, whole-rock Sr and Nd isotope geochemistry, and mineral O isotope geochemistry were used to investigate the source of these rocks and evaluate whether they are related to crustal anatexis. Average zircon εHf(t) values of the suite range from −4.7 to −7.9, whole-rock εNd(i) and 87Sr/86Sr(i) values range from −9.4 to −11.8 and 0.7064 to 0.7094 respectively, and quartz δ18OVSMOW values range from 6.8 to 9.4 ‰. Isotopic and geochemical data of these rocks are consistent with derivation from and assimilation of intermediate–mafic (meta)igneous rocks, at deep crustal levels, and are supported by thermodynamic melt models of Proterozoic igneous rocks equivalent to those exposed in the Pinaleño Mountains. In comparison with other Laramide-age anatectic granites in SE Arizona, those exposed in the Pinaleño Mountains are temporally similar but present compositional and isotopic differences that reflect melting and assimilation of different lithologies, producing distinct mineralogical and isotopic characteristics. The results suggest that crustal melting during this interval was not limited to metasedimentary protoliths and may have affected large portions of the deep crust. The early Paleogene Relleno suite in the Pinaleño Mountains strengthens the relationship between crustal melting and regions of thickened crust associated with the Sevier and Laramide orogenies. 
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  8. Abstract This article considers a long-outstanding open question regarding the Jacobian determinant for the relativistic Boltzmann equation in the center-of-momentum coordinates. For the Newtonian Boltzmann equation, the center-of-momentum coordinates have played a large role in the study of the Newtonian non-cutoff Boltzmann equation, in particular we mention the widely used cancellation lemma [1]. In this article we calculate specifically the very complicated Jacobian determinant, in ten variables, for the relativistic collision map from the momentum p to the post collisional momentum $$p'$$ p ′ ; specifically we calculate the determinant for $$p\mapsto u = \theta p'+\left( 1-\theta \right) p$$ p ↦ u = θ p ′ + 1 - θ p for $$\theta \in [0,1]$$ θ ∈ [ 0 , 1 ] . Afterwards we give an upper-bound for this determinant that has no singularity in both p and q variables. Next we give an example where we prove that the Jacobian goes to zero in a specific pointwise limit. We further explain the results of our numerical study which shows that the Jacobian determinant has a very large number of distinct points at which it is machine zero. This generalizes the work of Glassey-Strauss (1991) [8] and Guo-Strain (2012) [12]. These conclusions make it difficult to envision a direct relativistic analog of the Newtonian cancellation lemma in the center-of-momentum coordinates. 
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  9. Abstract Recent advancements in quantitatively estimating the thickness of Earth's crust in the geologic past provide an opportunity to test hypotheses explaining the tectonic evolution of southern Tibet. Outstanding debate on southern Tibet's Cenozoic geological evolution is complicated by poorly understood Mesozoic tectonics. We present new U‐Pb geochronology and trace element chemistry of detrital zircon from modern rivers draining the Gangdese Mountains in southern Tibet. Results are similar to recently published quantitative estimates of crustal thickness derived from intermediate‐composition whole rock records and show ~30 km of crustal thinning from 90 to 70 Ma followed by thickening to near‐modern values from 70 to 40 Ma. These results extend evidence of Late Cretaceous north–south extension along strike to the west by ~200 km, and support a tectonic model in which an east–west striking back‐arc basin formed along Eurasia's southern margin during slab rollback, prior to terminal collision of India with Eurasia. 
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