Abstract

AbstractPrevious studies of the central United States Cordillera have indicated that a high-elevation orogenic plateau, the Nevadaplano, was present in Late Cretaceous to early Paleogene time. The southern United States Cordillera and northern Mexican Cordillera share a similar geologic history and many of the same tectonic features (e.g., metamorphic core complexes) as the central United States Cordillera, raising the possibility that a similar plateau may have been present at lower latitudes. To test the hypothesis of an elevated plateau, we examined Laramide-age continental-arc geochemistry and employed an empirical relation between whole-rock La/Yb and Moho depth as a proxy for crustal thickness. Calculations of crustal thickness from individual data points range between 45 and 72 km, with an average of 57 ± 12 km (2σ) for the entire data set, which corresponds to 3 ± 1.8 km paleoelevation assuming simple Airy isostasy. These crustal thickness and paleoaltimetry estimates are similar to previous estimates for the Nevadaplano and are interpreted to suggest that an analogous high-elevation plateau may have been present in the southern United States Cordillera. This result raises questions about the mechanisms that thickened the crust, because shortening in the Sevier thrust belt is generally not thought to have extended into the southern United States Cordillera, south of ∼35°N latitude.

Highlights

  • High-elevation orogenic plateaus like the modern Tibetan, Anatolian, and AltiplanoPuna plateaus commonly develop in the interior, or hinterland, of convergent orogenic systems

  • We suggest that the best estimate of crustal thickness during the Laramide orogeny is obtained by considering the data collectively

  • Our estimate, 57 ± 12 km, for the average crustal thickness in the southern United States Cordillera and northern Mexican Cordillera during the Laramide orogeny is consistent with the concept of a high-elevation orogenic plateau

Read more

Summary

Introduction

High-elevation orogenic plateaus like the modern Tibetan, Anatolian, and AltiplanoPuna plateaus commonly develop in the interior, or hinterland, of convergent orogenic systems. If the Laramide orogeny in southern Arizona and northern Sonora resulted in thickened crust, mechanisms in addition to tectonic shortening are required.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call