NORTH AMERICA DYNAMICS AND WESTERN U.S. TECTONICS
Implications for NA plate dynamics include: (1) ridge push, which in the North Atlantic is unusually great, compresses NA against the western NA transform faults; (2) western NA potential energy is nearly sufficient to overcome this compression; (3) NE-oriented root drag equivalent to ~4 MPa acting on the root places western U.S. in a "stress shadow" that causes extension over most of this area; (4) basal tractions excited by global flow occur at ~20% the level estimated by BO; (5) shear load on transform boundaries averages 1-2 TN/m (1 TN/m=10^12 N/m, equivalent to 20 MPa on a 50 km-thick plate), with a San Andreas shear load of 1.6±0.4 TN/m which is largely responsible for NNW transport of the Sierra Nevada block and shear distributed across the western Great Basin; (6) a strong outward-directed pull on most subduction zones, which for Cascadia is important for northern Basin and Range extension and NNW transport of the Sierra Nevada block; (7) plate-normal stresses of ~1 TN/m are required along transform faults, which keeps the plate from extending in these areas; and (8) ocean plateau subduction at Yakutat (>6 TN/m) strongly compresses the continent. Of particular interest are the conclusions that forces concentrated on the cratonic root resist NA motion and that global-flow tractions are significantly less than those estimated by BO, which together imply a thin, relatively weak asthenosphere and stagnant deep Earth, and that fault shear stress levels are 20-140 MPa, which are low compared to lab-based expectations for frictional behavior, but are much larger than typical earthquake stress drops.