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As indicated in the introduction to this     and likewise so would subsidence gov-             continent, and to its prolific petroleum
paper, mechanisms for back-arc basin for-      erned by crustal thinning (e.g., McKenzie,        resources. Both basins were confined for
mation mainly imply extensional basin          1978). Beyond the rift tip there is no exten-     much of their early history with obvious
formation parallel to the subduction zone,     sion, and subsidence should not be expected.      implications for organic-rich deposits, and,
and do not readily explain the development     The tip of the Gulf of Mexico’s oceanic           in the case of the Canada Basin, with pos-
of highly oblique to orthogonal back-arc       crust never connected with the oceanic            sible major implications for global climate
basins such as the Gulf of Mexico or           crust of the Atlantic, while the transform        via the early Eocene Azolla bloom, which
Canada Basin. Elsewhere on the globe,          boundary at the distal end was separated          may have tipped Earth’s climate from
both the Tyrrhenian Basin in the               from the Pacific by continental terranes          the Cretaceous and Paleocene “Super
Mediterranean and the South China Sea          and a major volcanic arc (e.g., Dickinson         Greenhouse” into the “Ice House” climate
appear analogous to Gulf of Mexico and         and Lawton, 2001). Pacific seawater did           that remains today (e.g., Moran et al., 2006;
Canada Basin, in that they are triangular      not reach the Gulf of Mexico until the            Bujak, 2007; Bujak and Bujak, 2014). In
and occupy back-arc settings with spread-      Middle Jurassic, while connection with the        the Cenozoic, both basins formed massive
ing approximately orthogonal to the pre-       Atlantic was only achieved in the Late            depositional sinks for Laramide erosion
vailing subduction. Both of these spread-      Jurassic (Salvador, 1987). Breaching of the       products at either end of the continent and
ing cells are thought by some workers to       rift tip in the Florida Strait (Schlager et al.,  housed the two great North American del-
relate to continental collision. Tyrrhenian    1984) generated the incursion that flooded        tas (the Mississippi and Mackenzie).
Basin spreading has been related to inden-     the eolian Nophlet Formation, causing the
tation of Africa into Eurasia (Faccena et      rapid sea-level rise associated with deposi-        In conclusion, we propose that both the
al., 1996), while the South China Sea has      tion of the Smackover source rock (Heydari        Gulf of Mexico and Canada Basin re-
been related to extrusion tectonics from       et al., 1997). The lateral boundaries to the      opened Late Paleozoic sutures between
India’s indentation into Eurasia (e.g.,        pie-shaped ocean, the rifted margin of            major continents, these sutures intersecting
Tapponnier et al., 1986). However, an          North American and the Yucatan micro-             the paleo-Pacific margin at a high angle.
indentation mechanism of this type is not      continent grade into thick continental            Such small, highly rotational oceans, open-
available to explain the formation of either   crust, which remain elevated to this day.         ing at a high angle to the subduction direc-
the Gulf of Mexico or Canada Basin.            The pie-shaped oceanic Gulf of Mexico,            tion in back-arc settings (Fig. 5) could
                                               graded into thick continental crust in all        therefore constitute a lesser-known mani-
  A general explanation for the formation      directions, and marine connections with           festation of the Wilson Cycle. This mode
of high-angle back-arc basins may be a         the world ocean appear to have been sensi-        of formation may provide an alternative
manifestation of the Wilson Cycle; in this     tive to tectonic forcing, especially during       mechanism for development of other Pacific
case, the reactivation of weak Paleozoic       the Late Jurassic (Horbury et al., 2003).         rim ocean basins, such as the South China
Pangean suture zones in a back-arc stress                                                        Sea and possibly the Weddell Sea of
regime, where these sutures intersect the        Similarly, the Canada Basin rift tip in         Antarctica. Because their geometry gov-
paleo-Pacific margin. Notably, both the        the Mackenzie Delta area was located in           erns periodic confinement, and has influ-
Innuitian fold belt of Arctic Canada (essen-   the Cordillera hinterland and never con-          enced global climate as well as source and
tially a continuation of the Caledonian fold   nected with the Pacific. The lateral bound-       reservoir rock distribution, there is signifi-
belt; e.g., Ohta et al., 1989) and the Urals-  aries of the Canada Basin, the North              cant environmental and economic incen-
Novaya Zemlya-Taimyr fold belt of Russia       American craton, and the Alaska-Chukotka          tive to understanding the genesis and com-
(e.g., Puchkov, 2013) intersected the paleo-   terrane represent thick continental crust         mon factors of these basins.
Pacific where the Canada Basin later           that has remained elevated, and the trans-
developed (Fig. 4A). To the south, the Gulf    form margin was located against Eurasian          ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
of Mexico formed where the Suwanne and         continental crust. Connection via the
Appalachian-Ouachita-Marathon sutures          Western Interior Seaway to the Gulf of               We thank Ana Gibbons for assistance with
converged on the Pacific margin (e.g.,         Mexico in the Late Cretaceous was gov-            plate reconstructions and Christian Gram for
Parker, 2014; Thomas, 2006). In the            erned by the Cordilleran foreland basin           assistance with the Gulf of Mexico magnetic data.
Mesozoic, these unusual basins then occu-      flexuring (e.g., Jordan, 1981), but even this     We thank reviewers Mike Gurnis, Sergey Drachev,
pied the space between subduction zones        connection was prone to periodic confine-         and Dave Mosher for constructive suggestions that
from adjacent continental masses, and          ment during the Cenomanian-Turonian               improved the paper considerably.
their formation may therefore also relate to   (100.5–89.8 Ma) (Arthur and Sageman,
interaction between adjacent descending        2004). Deep ventilation between the Arctic        REFERENCES CITED
slabs. Testing the viability of such specula-  Ocean and the Atlantic was not initiated
tive mechanisms requires further study,        until middle Miocene time, when the               Alvey, A., Gaina, C., Kusznir, N.J., and Torsvik,
including modeling of lithosphere-mantle       Arctic Gateway in the Fram Strait opened             T.H., 2008, Integrated crustal thickness mapping
dynamics.                                      (Jakobsson et al., 2007), as a consequence           and plate reconstructions for the high Arctic:
                                               of oblique opening along the De Geer                 Earth and Planetary Science Letters, v. 274,
  The tendency toward restriction in both      Transform (e.g., Doré et al., 2016).                 p. 310–321, doi: 10.1016/j.epsl.2008.07.036.
basins was predisposed by their mode of
formation and resulting geometries. Simple       Thus, the first-order characteristics           Arthur, M.A., and Sageman, B.B., 2004, Sea-level
rules of plate tectonics require that the      shared by the Gulf of Mexico and Canada              control on source-rock development: Perspectives
amount of extension is reduced toward the      Basin siblings have been critical in the             from the Holocene Black Sea, the Mid-Cretaceous
rotation pole (e.g., Cox and Hart, 1986),      geological history of the North American             Western Interior Basin of North America, and
                                                                                                    the Late Devonian Appalachian Basin, in
                                                                                                    Harris, N.B., ed., The Deposition of Organic-
                                                                                                    Carbon-Rich Sediments: Models, Mechanisms,
                                                                                                    and Consequences: SEPM Special Publication
                                                                                                    82, p. 35–59.

                                               www.geosociety.org/gsatoday                                                                            9
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