GSA Connects 2021 in Portland, Oregon

Paper No. 168-11
Presentation Time: 4:35 PM

THE SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL EVOLUTION OF THE PORTLAND AND TUALATIN FOREARC BASINS, OREGON, USA


SCANLON, Darby1, BERSHAW, John2, WELLS, Ray2 and STREIG, Ashley R.2, (1)Chevron Corporation, 9525 Camino Media, Bakersfield, CA 93311, (2)Department of Geology, Portland State University, 1721 SW Broadway Ave, Portland, OR 97201

The Portland and Tualatin basins are part of the Salish-Puget-Willamette Lowland, a 900-km-long, forearc depression lying between the volcanic arc and the Coast Ranges of the Cascadia convergent margin. Such inland seaways are characteristic of warm, young slab subduction. We analyzed the basins to better understand their evolution and relation to Coast Range history and to provide an improved tectonic framework for the Portland metropolitan area. We model three key horizons in the basins: (1) the top of the Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG), (2) the bottom of the CRBG, and (3) the top of Eocene basement. Isochore maps constrain basin depocenters during (1) Pleistocene to mid-Miocene time (0–15 Ma), (2) CRBG (15.5–16.5 Ma), and (3) early Miocene to late Eocene (ca. 17–35 Ma) time. Results show that the Portland and Tualatin basins have distinct mid-Miocene to Quaternary depocenters but were one continuous basin from the Eocene until mid-Miocene time. A NW-striking gravity low coincident with the NW-striking, fault-bounded Portland Hills anticline is interpreted as an older graben coincident with observed thickening of CRBG flows and underlying sedimentary rocks. Neogene transpression in the forearc structurally inverted the Sylvan-Oatfield and Portland Hills normal faults as high-angle dextral-reverse faults, separating the Portland and Tualatin basins. An eastward shift of the forearc basin depocenter and ten-fold decrease in accommodation space provide temporal constraints on the emergence of the Coast Range to the west. Clockwise rotation and northward transport of the forearc causes ongoing deforming of the basins, producing local earthquakes beneath the Portland metropolitan area.