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Fate of the Lower Lithosphere

                           during Shallow-Angle Subduction:

                           The Laramide Example




          Alan D. Chapman, Ojashvi Rautela, Geology Dept., Macalester College, St. Paul, Minnesota 55105, USA; Jessie Shields, Department
          of Earth and Environmental Sciences, California State University, Fresno, California 93740, USA; Mihai N. Ducea, Dept. of
          Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA, and Faculty of Geology and Geophysics, University of Bucharest,
          010041, Bucharest, Romania; and Jason Saleeby, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology,
          Pasadena, California 91125, USA



          ABSTRACT                           abundance of spinel peridotite xenoliths in   and Shatsky conjugates, which were em-
            Continental arc lower crust and underly-  ca. 15 Ma and younger volcanic host rocks   bedded in the Farallon plate as they sub-
          ing mantle wedge assemblages native to the   and the presence of a vertical high-seismic-  ducted in Laramide time (Saleeby, 2003;
          Mojave Desert were dislodged, transported   velocity  anomaly  beneath  the  western   Liu et al., 2010). The damage zone con-
          eastward during Laramide shallow-angle   Colorado Plateau suggest that arclogite has   sists of the southern California batholith
          subduction, and attached to the base of the   been foundering into the mantle and being   (SCB) of the Mojave Desert and the south-
          Colorado Plateau transition zone (central   replaced by upwelling asthenosphere since   ernmost  Sierra  Nevada  batholith  (SNB;
          Arizona, USA) and further inboard. We   the early Miocene.             Fig. 1, inset).
          identify here two late Oligocene xenolith                                As emphasized below, the impact of oce-
          localities from the transition zone (Camp   INTRODUCTION AND           anic  plateaux  is  consistent  with  evidence
          Creek and Chino Valley) that likely contain   BACKGROUND               for the shutdown of arc magmatism, deep
          remnants  of  the  missing  Mojave  litho-                             crustal exhumation, tectonic underplating
          sphere. Geochemical, isotopic, and ther-  The SW North American Cordillera  of trench sediments, and—the focus of this
          mobarometric data from garnet clinopy-  The Laramide orogeny was a regional   research—removal of the LC-SCML (e.g.,
          roxenite, the dominant xenolith type at   compressional  event  that  evolved  from   Saleeby, 2003; Luffi et al., 2009; Chapman
          both studied localities, strongly suggest a   Late Cretaceous–early Paleogene contrac-  et  al.,  2012;  Chapman,  2017;  Ducea  and
          continental arc residue (“arclogite”) rather   tion of the SW margin of North America   Chapman, 2018).
          than a lower plate subduction (“eclogite”)   to Eocene–early Oligocene deformation
          origin. Zircon grains extracted from these   up to 2,000 km inboard in the craton inte-  Overview of the SCB Domain of the
          nodules yield a bimodal age distribution   rior (Saleeby, 2003; DeCelles, 2004;   Laramide Corridor
          with peaks at ca. 75 and 150 Ma, overlap-  Copeland et al., 2017). A commonly cited   The formerly contiguous SNB–SCB–
          ping ages of continental arc magmas   mechanism for the orogeny is intensified   Peninsular Ranges batholithic belt was a
          emplaced  into  the  Mojave  Desert  (the   traction and tectonic erosion of the lower-  >2000-km-long NNW-trending granitic
          southern California batholith) and suggest-  most crust and upper subcontinental man-  arc emplaced largely during three mag-
          ing a consanguineous relationship. In con-  tle lithosphere (LC-SCML) due to flatten-  matic “flare-up” events at ca. 230–210 Ma,
          trast, Mesozoic and early Cenozoic igneous   ing of an ~500-km-wide segment of the   ca. 160–150 Ma, and ca. 100–75 Ma (e.g.,
          rocks from SW Arizona, with age peaks at   subducting Farallon plate (Livaccari et al.,   Ducea, 2001). In contrast to the SNB to the
          ca. 60 and 170 Ma, do not provide as close   1981; Bird, 1988; Saleeby, 2003; Axen et   north and the Peninsular Ranges batholith
          a match. In light of these results, we sug-  al., 2018). Parts of the central Andean oro-  to the south (Fig. 1), much of the ~500-km-
          gest that a mafic keel to the southern   gen are regarded as the best modern ana-  long SCB  is rootless,  lying tectonically
          California batholith: (1) formed in two dis-  logue, where shallow slab segments coin-  above underplated trench assemblages (the
          crete (Late Jurassic and Late Cretaceous)   cide with colliding aseismic ridges and   Rand and related schists) that were trans-
          pulses; (2) was transported along the Moho   oceanic plateaux (e.g., Gutscher et al.,   ported inboard by shallow-angle subduc-
          ~500 km eastward along the leading edge   2000). Analysis of plate reconstructions   tion  (Jacobson  et  al.,  1988;  Grove  et
          of the shallowly subducting Farallon plate;   for the Pacific-Farallon ridge led to the   al., 2003; Chapman, 2017; Ducea and
          and (3) was affixed to the base of the crust   interpretation that the Laramide orogeny   Chapman, 2018). These schists are exposed
          in central Arizona. Titanite U-Pb and gar-  resulted from the subduction of conjugate   in the footwall of the shallowly dipping
          net Sm-Nd ages spanning ca. 60–30 Ma   massifs to the Hess and Shatsky oceanic   Rand fault, interpreted as a  remobilized
          suggest  that  displaced  arclogite  remained   plateaux  (Livaccari  et  al.,  1981;  Liu  et    subduction megathrust (e.g., Cheadle et al.,
          at >600 °C for tens of millions of years fol-  al., 2010). Furthermore, an ~500-km-wide   1986; Chapman, 2017), beneath deep
          lowing its dispersal and until entrainment   Laramide deformation corridor parallels   crustal  level  SCB  assemblages  and  the
          in host  latite. The lack of arclogite  and   the subduction trajectory of inferred Hess   southern SNB (Fig. 1).

          GSA Today, v. 30, https://doi.org/10.1130/GSATG412A.1. Copyright 2019, The Geological Society of America. CC-BY-NC.

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