Junction Jigsaw: Reconstructing the plate tectonic puzzle from the Panthalassa to the Tethys realm

Reconstructing Earth's past tectonic plate motion is vital for understanding its geological history, with implications for geodynamics, paleogeography, paleoclimatology, and resource exploration. However, many challenges exist in the reconstruction of subducted plates. While existing ocean basi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: van de Lagemaat, Suzanna Henderijne Aleide
Other Authors: Mantle dynamics & theoretical geophysics, van Hinsbergen, Douwe
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/431449
Description
Summary:Reconstructing Earth's past tectonic plate motion is vital for understanding its geological history, with implications for geodynamics, paleogeography, paleoclimatology, and resource exploration. However, many challenges exist in the reconstruction of subducted plates. While existing ocean basins can be reconstructed using marine magnetic anomalies and fracture zone data, the reconstruction of subducted plates lacked a clear framework due to varying interpretations of geological and geochemical data. Recently, however, a reconstruction protocol was developed to limit input data of a reconstruction to quantitative geological constraints. This approach avoids geodynamic interpretations, and yields transparent, reproducible, and adaptable reconstructions. In this thesis, this reconstruction protocol is applied to the southwest and west Panthalassa realm, resulting in kinematic reconstructions spanning from Patagonia to Japan, culminating in the complex reconstruction of the Junction Region between the Panthalassa and Tethys realms. The new reconstructions presented in this thesis have implications for both regional and global tectonics and geodynamics. The Cenozoic reconstruction of the SW Pacific region in a mantle reference frame shows that since subduction initiation, the Tonga-Kermadec slab was dragged laterally through the mantle for over 1200 km, including its lower-mantle portion. The most important finding of the Mesozoic SW Pacific reconstruction is that subduction along the East Gondwana margin continued until at least 90 Ma, and possibly until 79 Ma, which is 10 to 25 Ma longer than the generally accepted 100-105 Ma age for the end subduction there. In the southeast of the Panthalassa domain, the reconstruction of the Scotia Sea region shows that the South Sandwich subduction zone originates from Late Cretaceous (~80 Ma) subduction initiation below South Orkney continental crust, which is part of Antarctica. Subsequently, this subduction zone propagated northwards by delamination of South American ...