First‐Order Transition in Appalachian Orogenic Processes Revealed by Along‐Strike Variation of the Moho Geometry

Author:

Luo Yantao1ORCID,Long Maureen D.1ORCID,Karabinos Paul2,Rondenay Stéphane3ORCID,Masis Arce Roberto4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Yale University New Haven CT USA

2. Geosciences Department Williams College Williamstown MA USA

3. Department of Earth Science University of Bergen Bergen Norway

4. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Rutgers University Piscataway NJ USA

Abstract

AbstractAlong‐strike variation of the Laurentian rifted margin and the Appalachian orogen has long been recognized in the geologic record. We investigated the manifestation of this along‐strike variation at depth by generating scattered wavefield migration profiles from four dense seismic arrays deployed across the Appalachian orogen at different latitudes. All profiles exhibit a similar crustal thickness decrease of 15–20 km from the Mesoproterozoic Grenville Province to the Paleozoic Appalachian accreted terranes, but the Moho architecture differs dramatically along strike. The profiles beneath the central and southern Appalachians show a smoothly varying Moho geometry; in contrast, there is an abrupt Moho depth offset beneath the New England Appalachians. This contrast in Moho geometry may result from variations in the Laurentian rifted margin architecture, changes in Taconic orogeny subduction polarity, and greater crustal shortening during the Acadian‐Neoacadian orogeny in southern New England and the Alleghanian orogeny in the central and southern Appalachians. A first‐order along‐strike transition in the behavior of Appalachian orogenic processes is located between the central and New England Appalachians.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Yale University

Williams College

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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