Affiliation:
1. Department of Geological Sciences, Jackson School of Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin, 2305 Speedway Stop C1160, Austin, Texas 78712-1692, USA
Abstract
Abstract
The Colorado River extensional corridor (CREC) consists of Miocene metamorphic core complexes exhumed along top- to- the-NE low-angle detachment faults. The Big Maria and Riverside Mountains of southeastern California (USA) are located on the southwestern margin of the CREC, where little is known about the nature and timing of large-magnitude extension. We present the first detailed (U-Th)/He thermochronometric data from these ranges, elucidating the geometry and timing of upper-crustal extensional unroofing and exhumation. The Riverside Mountains yielded ca. 72–50 Ma zircon (U-Th)/He (ZHe) ages in the hanging wall of the Riverside detachment fault, and the corrugated footwall yielded ca. 50–18 Ma ZHe ages, indicating the preservation of an exhumed ZHe partial retention zone. Apatite (U-Th)/He data further indicate a potential secondary Miocene breakaway in the northeastern end of the range. Although the Big Maria Mountains have been thought to lie outside of the CREC, our new zircon and apatite (U-Th)/He data show that the entirety of the Big Maria Mountains was tectonically exhumed in the footwall of a detachment fault and cooled from >6 km depth between 22 and 15 Ma. ZHe data from both ranges suggest the Big Maria Mountains are part of the CREC and were exhumed from underneath the Riverside Mountains by a contemporaneous but structurally lower detachment—the Big Maria detachment—that is regionally correlative with the breakaway zone that delimits the western CREC margin. This detachment is temporally coeval with the structurally higher detachment system that forms the Whipple-Buckskin-Rawhide-Harcuvar-Harquahala meta morphic core complex belt to the northeast.
Publisher
Geological Society of America
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