Backbone of the Americas—Patagonia to Alaska, (3–7 April 2006)

Paper No. 1
Presentation Time: 8:30 AM

EXHUMATION OF A THICK CONTINENTAL MAGMATIC ARC IN THE NW CORDILLERA (USA)


MILLER, Robert B.1, WHITNEY, Donna L.2, BOWRING, Samuel A.3, DORAN, Brigid1 and MCLEAN, Noah3, (1)Department of Geology, San Jose State Univ, San Jose, CA 95192-0102, (2)Geology & Geophysics, Univ of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, (3)Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, rmiller@geosun.sjsu.edu

The Cretaceous to Paleogene core of the North Cascades represents a thick (> 60 km) continental magmatic arc that is proposed to have formed the western margin of a broad orogenic plateau analogous to the Altiplano. Major crustal thickening occurred at ~ 95-85 Ma. The Eocene demise of this arc coincided with the onset of transtension and broadly coeval ridge subduction at ~ 50 Ma. Eocene exhumation of high-grade rocks temporally overlapped with extensive diking, brittle dextral-normal faulting, and rapid deposition in fault-bounded basins flanking the arc.

Eocene metamorphism and deformation were focused in two domains of deep crust that cooled rapidly at 45-50 Ma. Nearly isothermal decompression from ~ 10 to < 5 kb is recorded in migmatitic Skagit Gneiss exposed in the core of a regional, orogen-parallel (NW-SE) antiform. The gneiss displays tight to isoclinal, recumbent folds of foliation that are nearly coaxially refolded by upright, more open folds; axes and lineation plunge gently NW-SE to NNE- SSW. Initially gently dipping mesoscopic ductile shear zones mainly yield top-to-NNW shear, and largely formed during decompression. The Skagit Gneiss is separated from low-grade rocks on the E by an Eocene dextral-normal fault zone. A < 1 km thick, strongly deformed, gently dipping transitional zone from migmatite, through non-migmatitic gneiss to medium-grade rock marks the upper boundary on Ruby Mountain. The other deeply exhumed domain, the 11-12 kbar Swakane Gneiss, lies south of the Skagit in another antiform. It is bounded above by a decollement that excised considerable crust. Available age data are compatible with top-to-N motion on this structure occurring during deformation in the Ruby Mountain high strain zone. We speculate that these structures may represent the top of an orogenic channel marked by orogen-parallel to -oblique flow, which occurred during regional strike slip and extension. Dike swarms broadly coeval with the high strain zones resulted in ~ 25% extension in one well-studied, > 125 km2 domain. WNW-ESE extension from the dike swarms contrasts with more N-S ductile stretching in high-grade rocks. The upper crust thus may have been decoupled from deep crust during exhumation, perhaps by the inferred orogenic channel. The exhumation of this arc may be a useful analog for younger, less deeply exhumed arcs.