Arc and Slab-Failure Magmatism in Cordilleran Batholiths II - The Cretaceous Peninsular Ranges Batholith of Southern and Baja California

被引:54
|
作者
Hildebrand, Robert S. [1 ]
Whalen, Joseph B. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Earth & Planetary Sci, Davis, CA 95616 USA
[2] Geol Survey Canada, Ottawa, ON K1A 0E8, Canada
关键词
CENTRAL SIERRA-NEVADA; MOJAVE-SONORA MEGASHEAR; TRONDHJEMITE-GRANODIORITE TTG; GUERRERO COMPOSITE TERRANE; ZARZA INTRUSIVE COMPLEX; WESTERN UNITED-STATES; NORTH-CENTRAL SONORA; TAUPO VOLCANIC ZONE; LARGE OCEAN BASINS; SNOW LAKE FAULT;
D O I
10.12789/geocanj.2014.41.059
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Ever since the late 1960s when Warren Hamilton proposed that the great Cordilleran batholiths of the western Americas are the roots of volcanic arcs like the Andes and were generated by longstanding eastward subduction, most geologists have followed suit, despite the evergrowing recognition that many Cordilleran batholiths are complex, composite bodies that developed with intervals of intense shortening and exhumation between and during periods of magmatism. The Peninsular Ranges batholith of Southern and Baja California provides a superb place to unravel the complexities because there is a lot of data and because it is longitudinally composed of two parts: an older western portion of weakly to moderately deformed, low-grade volcanic and epizonal plutonic rocks ranging in age from similar to 128-100 Ma; and a more easterly sector of deformed amphibolite grade rocks cut by compositionally zoned, mesozonal plutonic complexes of the La Posta suite, emplaced from 99-86 Ma. While plutons of the La Posta suite are generally considered to be the product of continued eastward subduction, they are enigmatic, because they and their wall rocks were rapidly exhumed from as deep as 23 km and eroded during, and just after, their emplacement, unlike plutons in magmatic arcs, which are generally emplaced in zones of subsidence. Here we resolve the enigma with a model where westward-dipping subduction led to arc magmatism of the western sector, the Santiago PeakAlisitos composite arc, during the period similar to 128-100 Ma. Arc magmatism shut down when the arc collided with a west-facing Early Cretaceous passive margin at about 100 Ma. During the collision the buoyancy contrast between the continental crust of the eastern block and its attached oceanic lithosphere led to failure of the subducting slab. The break-off allowed subjacent asthenosphere to upwell, adi-abatically melt, and rise into the upper plate to create the large zoned tonalite-granodiorite- granite complexes of the La Posta suite. While compositionally similar to arc plutons in many respects, the examples from the Southern California and Baja segments of the batholith have geochemistry that indicates they were derived from partial melting of asthenosphere at deeper levels in the mantle than typical arc magmas, and within the garnet stability field. This is consistent with asthenosphere upwelling through the torn lower-plate slab. We identify kindred rocks with similar geological relations in other Cordilleran batholiths of the Americas, such as the Sierra Nevada, which lead us to suggest that slab failure magmatism is common, both spatially and temporally.
引用
收藏
页码:399 / 458
页数:60
相关论文
共 24 条
  • [3] A paleomagnetic transect of the mid-Cretaceous Peninsular Ranges batholith, Baja California, Mexico
    Molina-Garza, Roberto S.
    Delgado-Argote, Luis A.
    Böhnel, Harald
    Ramírez, Elisa
    Ortega, Amabel
    Flores, Rubén Contreras
    Memoir of the Geological Society of America, 2014, 211 : 713 - 737
  • [5] Forearc-basin sedimentary response to rapid Late Cretaceous batholith emplacement in the Peninsular Ranges of southern and Baja California
    Kimbrough, DL
    Smith, DP
    Mahoney, JB
    Moore, TE
    Grove, M
    Gastil, RG
    Ortega-Rivera, A
    Fanning, CM
    GEOLOGY, 2001, 29 (06) : 491 - 494
  • [6] RB-SR ISOTOPIC SYSTEMATICS IN PENINSULAR RANGES BATHOLITH OF SOUTHERN AND BAJA CALIFORNIA
    EARLY, TO
    SILVER, LT
    TRANSACTIONS-AMERICAN GEOPHYSICAL UNION, 1973, 54 (04): : 494 - &
  • [7] K-AR APPARENT AGES, PENINSULAR RANGES BATHOLITH, SOUTHERN-CALIFORNIA AND BAJA CALIFORNIA
    KRUMMENACHER, D
    GASTIL, RG
    BUSHEE, J
    DOUPONT, J
    GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA BULLETIN, 1975, 86 (06) : 760 - 768
  • [8] Tectonic implications for the along-strike variation of the Peninsular Ranges batholith, southern and Baja California
    Wetmore, PH
    Schmidt, KL
    Paterson, SR
    Herzig, C
    GEOLOGY, 2002, 30 (03) : 247 - 250
  • [9] Tectonic implications of postcontractional magmatism of the Alisitos arc segment of the Peninsular Ranges, Baja California, Mexico
    Wetmore, Paul H.
    Hughes, Scott S.
    Stremtan, Ciprian
    Ducea, Mihai N.
    Alsleben, Helge
    Wetmore, P.H. (wetmore@usf.edu), 1600, Geological Society of America (211): : 669 - 690
  • [10] Thermochronology of Cretaceous batholithic rocks in the northern Peninsular Ranges batholith, southern California: Implications for the Late Cretaceous tectonic evolution of southern California
    Miggins, Daniel P.
    Premo, Wayne R.
    Snee, Lawrence W.
    Yeoman, Ross
    Naeser, Nancy D.
    Naeser, Charles W.
    Morton, Douglas M.
    Memoir of the Geological Society of America, 2014, 211 : 199 - 261