New geophysical parameters for understanding the evolution of the St. Elias Orogen, southern Alaska

text The St. Elias Orogen is the result of oblique collision and flat-slab subduction in the Gulf of Alaska between North America (NA) and the Yakutat microplate (YAK). Extensive glaciation and a complex tectonic environment make this region a unique case study in which to examine the details of ter...

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Main Author: Worthington, Lindsay Lowe
Other Authors: Gulick, Sean P. S., van Avendonk, Harm J, Pavlis, Terry L, Horton, Brian K, Cloos, Mark, Lavier, Luc L
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/19577
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spelling ftunivtexas:oai:repositories.lib.utexas.edu:2152/19577 2023-05-15T18:44:38+02:00 New geophysical parameters for understanding the evolution of the St. Elias Orogen, southern Alaska Worthington, Lindsay Lowe Gulick, Sean P. S. van Avendonk, Harm J Pavlis, Terry L Horton, Brian K Cloos, Mark Lavier, Luc L December 2010 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2152/19577 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/2152/19577 Geophysic St. Elias Oroge Yakutat microplate Alaska 2010 ftunivtexas 2020-12-23T22:10:19Z text The St. Elias Orogen is the result of oblique collision and flat-slab subduction in the Gulf of Alaska between North America (NA) and the Yakutat microplate (YAK). Extensive glaciation and a complex tectonic environment make this region a unique case study in which to examine the details of terrane accretion and the possible coupled influence of climate and tectonic drivers on the structural and topographic evolution of an orogenic wedge. The dataset for this project includes: 3 multi-channel seismic reflection surveys (~4000 km total seismic reflection data) and a ~450 km-long wide-angle seismic refraction profile. Reflection seismic profiles across the offshore YAK-NA deformation front, provide constraints for quantifying Pleistocene deformation recorded in the glaciomarine Yakataga formation. Growth strata and kinematic fold analysis allow comparison of relative timing of fault activity, which reveals temporal and spatial shifting of deformation within the margin towards the onshore eastern corner of the orogen. This information is important not only for the development of regional tectonic models, but also for understanding how climatic shifts may have affected the evolution of margin architecture during Pleistocene glacial-interglacial periods. Joint tomographic inversion of coincident reflection and refraction profiles constrains YAK crustal velocity and thickness. The offshore YAK crust ranges in thickness from 15 to 35 km, considerably thicker than normal oceanic crust. The crustal thickness and velocity structure support an oceanic plateau origin for the YAK microplate. Crustal velocity and structure are continuous across the YAK shelf except for a regional dip of the top of YAK crust of ~3° to the west. Moho arrivals across the profile do not mimic the dipping trajectory of the basement, indicating that the offshore YAK crust is doorstop-shaped, thinning in the convergence direction. This geometry leads to the following implications for the YAK-NA collision: first, uplift and deformation have intensified through time as successively thicker, more buoyant YAK crust attempts to subduct; second, current topography, exhumation and deformation patterns are partially controlled by underlying crustal geometry of converging YAK crust. Geological Sciences Other/Unknown Material Yakutat Alaska The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks Gulf of Alaska
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftunivtexas
language English
topic Geophysic
St. Elias Oroge
Yakutat microplate
Alaska
spellingShingle Geophysic
St. Elias Oroge
Yakutat microplate
Alaska
Worthington, Lindsay Lowe
New geophysical parameters for understanding the evolution of the St. Elias Orogen, southern Alaska
topic_facet Geophysic
St. Elias Oroge
Yakutat microplate
Alaska
description text The St. Elias Orogen is the result of oblique collision and flat-slab subduction in the Gulf of Alaska between North America (NA) and the Yakutat microplate (YAK). Extensive glaciation and a complex tectonic environment make this region a unique case study in which to examine the details of terrane accretion and the possible coupled influence of climate and tectonic drivers on the structural and topographic evolution of an orogenic wedge. The dataset for this project includes: 3 multi-channel seismic reflection surveys (~4000 km total seismic reflection data) and a ~450 km-long wide-angle seismic refraction profile. Reflection seismic profiles across the offshore YAK-NA deformation front, provide constraints for quantifying Pleistocene deformation recorded in the glaciomarine Yakataga formation. Growth strata and kinematic fold analysis allow comparison of relative timing of fault activity, which reveals temporal and spatial shifting of deformation within the margin towards the onshore eastern corner of the orogen. This information is important not only for the development of regional tectonic models, but also for understanding how climatic shifts may have affected the evolution of margin architecture during Pleistocene glacial-interglacial periods. Joint tomographic inversion of coincident reflection and refraction profiles constrains YAK crustal velocity and thickness. The offshore YAK crust ranges in thickness from 15 to 35 km, considerably thicker than normal oceanic crust. The crustal thickness and velocity structure support an oceanic plateau origin for the YAK microplate. Crustal velocity and structure are continuous across the YAK shelf except for a regional dip of the top of YAK crust of ~3° to the west. Moho arrivals across the profile do not mimic the dipping trajectory of the basement, indicating that the offshore YAK crust is doorstop-shaped, thinning in the convergence direction. This geometry leads to the following implications for the YAK-NA collision: first, uplift and deformation have intensified through time as successively thicker, more buoyant YAK crust attempts to subduct; second, current topography, exhumation and deformation patterns are partially controlled by underlying crustal geometry of converging YAK crust. Geological Sciences
author2 Gulick, Sean P. S.
van Avendonk, Harm J
Pavlis, Terry L
Horton, Brian K
Cloos, Mark
Lavier, Luc L
author Worthington, Lindsay Lowe
author_facet Worthington, Lindsay Lowe
author_sort Worthington, Lindsay Lowe
title New geophysical parameters for understanding the evolution of the St. Elias Orogen, southern Alaska
title_short New geophysical parameters for understanding the evolution of the St. Elias Orogen, southern Alaska
title_full New geophysical parameters for understanding the evolution of the St. Elias Orogen, southern Alaska
title_fullStr New geophysical parameters for understanding the evolution of the St. Elias Orogen, southern Alaska
title_full_unstemmed New geophysical parameters for understanding the evolution of the St. Elias Orogen, southern Alaska
title_sort new geophysical parameters for understanding the evolution of the st. elias orogen, southern alaska
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/19577
geographic Gulf of Alaska
geographic_facet Gulf of Alaska
genre Yakutat
Alaska
genre_facet Yakutat
Alaska
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2152/19577
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