Complex proterozoic crustal assembly of southwestern North America in an arcuate subduction system: The Black Canyon of the Gunnison, Southwestern Colorado

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

  • Micah J. Jessup
  • Karl E. Karlstrom
  • Connelly, James
  • Michael Williams
  • Richard Livaccari
  • Amanda Tyson
  • Steven A. Rogers

The dominant orogenic fabric in Proterozoic rocks of the southwestern U.S. includes a series of NE-striking shear zones that are commonly interpreted as suture zones across which blocks of juvenile crust were assembled to the southern margin of Laurentia. New structural and geochronological data from southwestern Colorado suggest that fabrics related to assembly of tectonostratigraphic terranes in this area strike northwest. The NW-striking foliations represent deformation at ca. 10–20 km paleodepths (ca. 1.77–1.71 Ga), and are parallel to magnetic anomalies and to gradients in mantle velocity structure. The agreement between these data sets suggests that the NW-striking structures are important at lithospheric scale, extend to >100 km depth, and may record assembly of southwestern Colorado across NW-striking tectonic boundaries. Geochronologic data indicate that northwest (central Colorado)-and northeast (Cheyenne belt)-striking boundaries developed simul-taneously during accretion of southwestern Laurentia between ca. 1.78–1.73 Ga. We propose that the Yavapai province at ca. 1.75 Ga may have involved a complex arcuate subduction system, with multiple arcs, analogous to that of the modern Banda Sea, in the Indonesia region.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Rocky Mountain Region?An Evolving Lithosphere : Tectonics, Geochemistry, and Geophysics, 2005
EditorsG. Randy Keller, Karl E. Kalstrom
Number of pages18
PublisherWiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.
Publication date2005
Pages21-38
ISBN (Print)9780875904191
ISBN (Electronic)9781118666326
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2005
SeriesGeophysical Monograph Series
Volume154
ISSN0065-8448

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Acknowledgenzents. We are greatly indebtcd to Colin Shaw, Jamey Jones, Martha Eppes, and the University of New Mexico field caillp (summer 200 1 ) for providing assistance with field-work. Also, thanks to thc Black Canyon National Park for a sample pcrmit and acccss to the park. Revicws by Ernic Duebendorfcr and Christine Siddoway improved the manuscript. Funding for this projcct was provided by National Science Foundation grants EAR 0003500 to K. Karlstrom, M. Williams, C. Siddoway, J. Con-nelly and EAR 0208473 to K. Karlstrorn.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2005 by the American Geophysical Union.

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