2008 Joint Meeting of The Geological Society of America, Soil Science Society of America, American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies with the Gulf Coast Section of SEPM

Paper No. 2
Presentation Time: 8:15 AM

The 4-D Evolution of the Lithosphere Recorded by Xenoliths, Isostasy, Volcanism and Other Thermally Related Data


MORGAN, Paul1, O'REILLY, Suzanne Y.2 and GRIFFIN, William L.2, (1)Department of Geology, Northern Arizona University, 1095 Rosemary St, Denver, CO 80230, (2)GEMOC, Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia, Paul.Morgan@nau.edu

Xenoliths and xenocrysts are direct samples of the lithosphere and, together with surface geological sampling and heat flow data, show, on a global scale, episodic and secular evolution in surviving continental lithosphere. In general, Archean mantle lithosphere is thick, has a depleted composition, cool geotherms, and its upper crust is low in U, Th, and K. In contrast, Phanerozoic lithosphere is thinner, compositionally fertile, has a wide range of geotherms, and its upper crust is heterogeneous in U, Th, and K. Proterozoic lithosphere has intermediate properties between Archean and Phanerozoic lithospheres. These compositional and thermal differences combine to produce observed geophysical differences among lithospheres of different ages, in particular, differences among seismic profiles.

On a regional scale (longer than flexural wavelengths) isostasy can be used to probe the 4-D evolution of the lithosphere as elevation responds to changes in lithospheric structure. For example, isostasy places significant constraints on the Phanerozoic evolution of the Southwestern US. During most of the Phanerozoic, the Western US was a continental platform. A section of shallow marine and continental sediments consistent with the global eustatic curve indicates that this lithosphere was essentially stable. No Precambrian or Early to Mid-Paleozoic precursors of the Colorado Plateau or southern Rocky Mountains were apparent. Late Paleozoic Ancestral Rocky Mountain formation, subsequent erosion and magmatic activity may have modified the lithosphere defining the Colorado Plateau. However, its bulk structure is constrained by isostasy in that it remained close to sea level into the Late Cretaceous (Campanian). Data from xenoliths erupted by Cenozoic volcanism and low heat flow in the interior of the Colorado Plateau provide evidence for a cool, relatively thick Colorado Plateau lithosphere at the time of Laramide southern Rocky Mountain compressional deformation that was capable of transmitting plate-boundary stresses from the west into the interior of the plate.