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100 W                                90 W                           80 W                                    Canadian Arctic margin, simultaneously
30 N                     ta-Marathon Orogen                     Appalachian                                          closing the South Anyui Sea, a former
                                                                terranes                                             arm of the paleo-Pacific Ocean between
                                     Mississippi                                                                     North America and Eurasia (Figs. 4A and
                                     River                         Suwanne sut ure                                   4B). Differences between modern models
                                                                                                                     mainly relate to the size and nature of
                        HMA                                    Suwanne                                               crustal domains in the Canada Basin and
                                                    FMA terrane                                                      adjacent Arctic Ocean (oceanic crust,
                    Ouachi                                                                                           exhumed mantle, and hyperextended con-
                                                              Suture?                                                tinental crust). These interpretations vari-
                                                                                                               ECMA  ously utilize gravity inversion of crustal
                                                                                                                     thickness (Alvey et al., 2008), seismic
                        GoM                                                                                          mapping (Nikishin et al., 2014), analysis of
                                                                                                                     seismic refraction velocities (Chian et al.,
                    TT                                                                                               2016), and integration of all of these tech-
                                                                                                                     niques with gravity and magnetic data
                             Suture?                Post-GoM                                                         (e.g., Gaina et al., 2011). While the differ-
                                                    Accreted                                                         ent approaches affect the interpreted loca-
                                                    terranes                                                         tion of the distal transform, the kinematic
                                                                                                                     solution with a counter-clockwise rota-
20 N                    CMA                                    Legend               100 km                           tional opening of the Canada Basin is simi-
                                   Yucatan block    Wide COB                                                         lar. The rift tip of the Canada Basin rota-
          Post-GoM                                  Narrow COB                                                       tion was located in the Mackenzie Delta
          Accreted                                  Early Cret. carbonate margin                                     area, while the distal transform ran along
          terranes                                                                                                   the proto-North Barents and Kara Sea
                                                    Salt basin limit                >200 nT                          margin, either tracking the Alpha Ridge
          Pacific                                   Terrane boundary                                                 (Doré et al., 2016; see also Figs. 4A and
          Ocean                                     Fracture zone                                                    4B) or the Lomonosov Ridge (Grantz et al.,
                                                    Spreading axis                                                   1979; Evangelatos and Mosher, 2016). The
                                                                                                                     rifted margins of the North American cra-
                                                    Subduction zone                                                  ton and the Alaska-Chukotka terrane made
                                                    Orogenic front                                                   up the lateral boundaries. Recent models
                                                                                                                     show that this rotation was succeeded by
                                                    Chixculub impact                                                 a Late Cretaceous phase of spreading,
                                                                                                                     orthogonal to the previous direction, form-
                                                    Mississippi Delta                                                ing the Makarov-Podvodnikov Basin,
                                                                                                                     which thus interposes between the Early
                                                    Transform motion <200 nT                                         Cretaceous Canada Basin and the
                                                                                                                     Cenozoic Eurasia Basin (Fig. 1) (cf. Doré
Figure 2. USGS magnetic data of Gulf of Mexico. GoM—Gulf of Mexico; COB—continent-ocean                              et al., 2016; Whittaker and Ady, 2015;
boundary; CMA—Campeche magnetic anomaly; FMA—Florida magnetic anomaly; HMA—Houston                                   Nikishin et al., 2014).
magnetic anomaly; CI—Chicxulub impact; ECMA—East Coast magnetic anomaly; TT—Tehuantepec
transform. Lower Cretaceous carbonate platform after Winker and Buffler (1985). Large arrow illus-                     Termination of Canada Basin seafloor
trates the post–160 Ma rotational opening.                                                                           spreading is not well constrained. The
                                                                                                                     Canada Basin has a distinct abandoned
Gulf of Mexico is underlain by thin crust           (e.g., Bird and Houseknecht, 2011). The                          spreading axis, revealed by gravity data,
(e.g., Marton and Buffler, 1994; Eddy et al.,       Canada Basin is underlain by thin crust                          and a few weak linear magnetic anomalies
2014), with substantial swathes of oceanic          (e.g., Alvey et al., 2008; Chian et al., 2016;                   on either side of the ridge (Doré et al.,
crust developing in a back-arc setting to the       Doré et al., 2016; Mosher et al., 2016) and                      2016; Chian et al., 2016; Mosher et al.,
Paleo-Pacific (Stern and Dickinson, 2010)           has been interpreted to have magma-poor                          2016). We interpret these magnetic anoma-
at an unusually high angle to the line of           margins, with exhumed mantle, flanking a                         lies as isochrons formed shortly after the
subduction.                                         central area with oceanic crust (Grantz et                       Cretaceous magnetic quiet period (i.e.,
                                                    al., 2011; Chian et al., 2016).                                  after 83.5 Ma), indicating that spreading
CANADA BASIN OPENING                                                                                                 ended at ca. 80 Ma (Fig. 4B). The amount
                                                      The Arctic is comparatively data-poor                          of rotation is supported by paleomagnetic
  The Canada Basin margins experienced              due to its remoteness and harsh climate,                         data from the Alaska margin (Halgedahl
significant rifting in the Kimmeridgian             and several vastly different plate models                        and Jarrard, 1987), and the resulting recon-
(157.3–152.1 Ma) (Dixon, 1982).                     have been proposed (older models summa-                          struction is supported by detrital zircon
Barremian (130.8–126.3 Ma) break-up was             rized by Lawver and Scotese, 1990).                              data from the conjugate margins (Gottlieb
coincident with major dike swarms in the            Recently acquired data (e.g., Gottlieb et                        et al., 2014).
Canadian Arctic Island area, Svalbard, and          al., 2014; Mosher et al., 2016) underpin
Franz Josef Land. Ages range between ca.            modern models (e.g., Alvey et al., 2008;
138 and 125 Ma, but appear dominated by             Whittaker and Ady, 2015; Doré et al.,
ca. 125 Ma high-precision U/Pb geochro-             2016). These are mostly a variation of the
nology (e.g., Corfu et al., 2013; Døssing et        “windshield wiper” model (Hamilton,
al., 2013; Polteau et al., 2015). Break-up is       1970; Grantz et al., 1979), whereby the
also marked by a pronounced regional                Canada Basin opened by ~66º CCW
unconformity in the Mackenzie Delta–                rotation of a microcontinental fragment
Beaufort Sea and North Slope of Alaska              (Alaska-Chukotka), away from the

6 GSA Today | January 2017
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