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Here, we present a comprehensive overview of available paleomagnetic studies and datasets from northern Alaska, USA, and Yukon, Canada. Most studies in this region were conducted when our understanding of best-practices paleomagnetism was still developing; as a result, many do not meet modern standards of data quality and many interpretations of the paleomagnetic data—though valid at the time—are now also outdated. In this review, we assess what data are reliable, what interpretations have stood the test of time, and what the existing data can constrain about the tectonic history of this region. We find that although a middle to Late Cretaceous (Aptian–Turonian) overprint pervades much of this area, many sites still retain primary remanence directions, some dating as far back as the Neoproterozoic. Studies that found complete overprinting in the Cretaceous also typically analyzed poor lithologic recorders of paleomagnetic directions, such as carbonates. Based on our assessment of the most reliable data from the study region, relative motion between the examined outboard terranes and Laurentia was not yet complete by the early Late Cretaceous. We also find that “high latitude” dinosaur fossil sites were more northerly than today, confirming previous assumptions about the paleolatitudes at these sites. Finally, we discuss how the widely cited Jurassic–Cretaceous counterclockwise rotation hypothesis for the Arctic Alaska terrane is no longer supported by the existing paleomagnetic data, and the validity of this hypothesis should be critically re-examined.more » « less
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McClelland, W.C. (, Memoir Geological Society of America)Whitmeyer, S.J. (Ed.)
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Dumoulin, Julie A; Strauss, Justin V; Repetski, John E (, Special publication Geological Society of London)Percival, Ian; Harper, David; Lefebvre, Bertrand; Servais, Tom (Ed.)
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McClelland, William; Strauss, Justin; Colpron, Maurice; Gilotti, Jane; Faehnrich, Karol; Malone, Shawn; Gehrels, George; Macdonald, Francis; Oldow, John (, GSA Today)
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