BASEMENT-INVOLVED FORELAND DEFORMATION IN NORTHEASTERN ALASKA—STRUCTURAL STYLE, CORDILLERAN ANALOGS, AND TECTONIC DRIVERS
The Laramide and Sierras Pampeanas basement-involved foreland thrust provinces are widely recognized to be linked to amagmatic flat-slab subduction. However, the only reasonably well-documented flat-slab episode beneath southern Alaska was in Paleocene to early Eocene time, which corresponds temporally to the development of a fairly conventional thrust system in the central and western Brooks Range, in which basement-involved hinterland structures ramped up-section to the north to form a thin-skinned foreland fold-thrust belt. The Neogene basement-involved deformation in the northeastern Brooks Range foreland cannot be correlated with the conventional flat-slab pattern of arc volcanism (typically a magmatic sweep followed by a magmatic lull). Collisional terrane accretion in southern Alaska provides a possible tectonic driver for this pattern of thrusting. In addition, the present-day plate structure of southern Alaska consists of an abruptly creased (convex-upward) descending slab, which might act as a stress guide, driving crustal seismicity in central and northern Alaska. If this creased plate geometry propagated across southeastern Alaska in Neogene time, it might have driven the foreland basement-involved deformation, 1,000 km north of the subduction zone.