Abstract

Initially horizontal sheet intrusions of Middle Proterozoic diabase are abundant in a region 650 by 300 km across in Arizona and California. The diabase forms discordant sheets in basement granite and gneiss and sills in overlying shelf sedimentary sequences. Massive granite is the most common basement host for the sheets, probably because it fractured more easily than foliated hosts during sheet emplacement. Steep feeder dikes are rare compared to the sheets. The diabase in many places is exposed in fault blocks that were tilted during Tertiary tectonic extension. Structure sections restored from the map patterns of upended blocks show that the sheets were intruded at levels throughout the upper crust, to depths of at least 13 km. Sheet intrusion implies a vertical orientation of the least compressive stress, so I conclude that the crust was under tectonic compression or in an isotropic state of stress at the time of diabase intrusion about 1.1 Ga. Magma overpressures, water encountered by rising magma, vertical changes in the crustal stress regime, and flotation of low‐density granite all may be important factors for sheet intrusion. The stress conditions suggested by the presence of the sheets argue against an extensional tectonic regime earlier proposed for the diabase event. The diabase province contrasts structurally with similar‐age provinces of basaltic magmatism elsewhere in North America that show evidence of tectonic extension, such as the midcontinent rift. The consistent orientations of the sheets commonly allow them to be used as structural markers for postdiabase deformation of basement blocks. Sheet intrusions in the geologic record may be seriously underreported. Their recognition is important for the interpretation of seismic reflection profiles of continental crust. Sheets in Arizona may be responsible for the Bagdad reflection sequence, which extends to depths of at least 15 km.

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