2015 GSA Annual Meeting in Baltimore, Maryland, USA (1-4 November 2015)

Paper No. 181-12
Presentation Time: 11:05 AM

NORTH AMERICA’S MIDCONTINENT RIFT: WHEN RIFT MET LIP


STEIN, Carol A.1, STEIN, Seth2, KLEY, Jonas3, KELLER, G.R.4, BOLLMAN, Trevor5, WOLIN, Emily5, ZHANG, Hao5, FREDERIKSEN, Andrew6, OLA, Kunle6 and WYSESSION, Michael E.7, (1)Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago, 845 W. Taylor St, m/c 186, Chicago, IL 60607-7059, (2)Earth & Planetary Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208-3130, (3)Geoscience Center, University of Goettingen, Goldschmidtstr. 3, Goettingen, 37077, Germany, (4)School of Geology and Geophysics, University of Oklahoma, 100 East Boyd Street, Suite 810, Norman, OK 73019, (5)Earth & Planetary Sciences, Northwestern University, 2145 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208-3130, (6)Department of Geological Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB R3T 2N2, Canada, (7)Earth and Planetary Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO 63130-4899, cstein@uic.edu

Rifts are segmented linear depressions, filled with sedimentary and igneous rocks, that form by extension and often evolve into plate boundaries. Flood basalts, a class of Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs), are broad regions of extensive volcanism due to sublithospheric processes. Typical rifts are not filled with flood basalts, and typical flood basalts are not associated with significant crustal extension and faulting. North America’s Midcontinent Rift (MCR) is an unusual combination. Its 3000-km length formed as part of the 1.1 Ga rifting of Amazonia (Precambrian NE South America) from Laurentia (Precambrian North America) and became inactive once seafloor spreading was established, but contains an enormous volume of igneous rocks. MCR volcanics are significantly thicker than other flood basalts, due to deposition in a narrow rift rather than a broad region, giving a rift geometry but a LIP's magma volume. Structural modeling of seismic reflection data shows an initial rift phase where flood basalts filled a fault-controlled extending basin, and a postrift phase where volcanics and sediments were deposited in a thermally subsiding basin without associated faulting. The crust thinned during rifting and rethickened during the postrift phase and later compression, yielding the present thicker crust. The coincidence of a rift and LIP yielded the world's largest deposit of native copper. This combination arose when a new rift associated with continental breakup interacted with a mantle plume or anomalously hot or fertile upper mantle. Integration of diverse data types and models will give insight into questions including how the magma source was related to the rifting, how their interaction operated over a long period of rapid plate motion, why the lithospheric mantle below the MCR differs only slightly from its surroundings, how and why extension, volcanism, and compression varied along the rift arms, and how successful seafloor spreading ended the rift phase.

Papers, talks, and educational material are available at http://www.earth.northwestern.edu/people/seth/research/mcr.html

This abstract was coauthored by Douglas Wiens, Ghassan Al-Equabi, Gregory P. Waite, Eunice Blavascunas, Carol A. Engelmann, Lucy M. Flesch, Jake Crane, Tyrone O. Rooney, Robert Moucha, and Eric Brown.