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Creators/Authors contains: "Wang, Jordan W"

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  1. 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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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 18, 2026
  2. 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. 
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  3. Abstract The plate-boundary conditions of the Mesozoic North American Cordillera remain poorly constrained, but most studies support large (>800 km) southward motion of the Insular and Intermontane superterranes during Jurassic–Cretaceous time. An implicit feature in these models of large coastwise displacements is the presence of one or more continentalscale sinistral strike-slip faults that could have dismembered and displaced terrane fragments southward along the western margin of North America prior to the onset of mid-Cretaceous shortening and dextral strike-slip faulting. In this study, we documented a system of sinistral intra-arc shear zones within the Insular superterrane that may have accommodated large southward motion. Employment of a new large-n igneous zircon U-Pb method more than doubled the precision of measurements obtained by laser ablation–inductively coupled plasma–mass spectrometry (from ~1% to 0.5%) and allowed us to demonstrate the close temporal-spatial relationship between magmatism and deformation by dating comagmatic crosscutting phases. Crystallization ages of pre-, syn-, and postkinematic intrusions show that the intra-arc shear zones record an Early Cretaceous phase of sinistral oblique convergence that terminated between 107 and 101 Ma. Shear zone cessation coincided with: (1) collapse of the Gravina basin, (2) development of a single voluminous arc that stitched the Insular and Intermontane superterranes together, and (3) initiation of eastwest contractional deformation throughout the Coast Mountains. We interpret these concurrent tectono-magmatic events to mark a shift in plate kinematics from a sinistral-oblique system involving separate terranes and intervening ocean basins to a strongly convergent two-plate margin involving a single oceanic plate and the newly assembled western margin of North America. 
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