Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Cache Creek terrane entrapment: Oroclinal paradox within the Canadian Cordillera

View through CrossRef
Exotic and far‐traveled oceanic crustal rocks of the Cache Creek terrane (CC) are bordered by less exotic Quesnel (QN) and Stikine (ST) arc terranes to the east, north, and west. All of these terranes are enveloped by an arcuate belt of displaced continental margin rocks; the Kootenay (KO), Nisling (NS), and parts of the Yukon‐Tanana (YTT) terranes, that have indirect ties to ancestral North America (NA). Initial 87Sr/86Sr isopleths conform to this arcuate pattern. Such a pattern of concentric belts presents a geological conundrum: How did the QN, ST, and CC come to be virtually enveloped by terranes with ties to NA? Past and current models that explain assembly of the Canadian Cordillera are deficient in their treatment of this problem. We propose that Early Mesozoic QN and ST were joined through their northern ends as two adjacent arc festoons that faced south toward the Cache Creek ocean (Panthalassa?). Oceanic plateau remnants within the CC today were transported from the Tethyan realm and collided with these arcs during subduction of the Cache Creek ocean. Counterclockwise oroclinal rotation of ST and NS terranes in the Late Triassic to Early Jurassic caused enclosure of the CC. Rotation continued until these terranes collided with QN in the Middle Jurassic. Paleomagnetic declination data provide support for this model in the form of large average anticlockwise rotations for Permian to Early Jurassic sites in ST but moderate clockwise rotations for sites in QN. Specific modern analogues for the Cordilleran orocline include the Yap trench, where the Caroline rise is colliding end‐on with the Mariana Arc and the Banda Arc, located on the southeastern “tail” of the Asian plate, which is being deformed into a tight loop by interactions with the Australian and Pacific plates.
Title: Cache Creek terrane entrapment: Oroclinal paradox within the Canadian Cordillera
Description:
Exotic and far‐traveled oceanic crustal rocks of the Cache Creek terrane (CC) are bordered by less exotic Quesnel (QN) and Stikine (ST) arc terranes to the east, north, and west.
All of these terranes are enveloped by an arcuate belt of displaced continental margin rocks; the Kootenay (KO), Nisling (NS), and parts of the Yukon‐Tanana (YTT) terranes, that have indirect ties to ancestral North America (NA).
Initial 87Sr/86Sr isopleths conform to this arcuate pattern.
Such a pattern of concentric belts presents a geological conundrum: How did the QN, ST, and CC come to be virtually enveloped by terranes with ties to NA? Past and current models that explain assembly of the Canadian Cordillera are deficient in their treatment of this problem.
We propose that Early Mesozoic QN and ST were joined through their northern ends as two adjacent arc festoons that faced south toward the Cache Creek ocean (Panthalassa?).
Oceanic plateau remnants within the CC today were transported from the Tethyan realm and collided with these arcs during subduction of the Cache Creek ocean.
Counterclockwise oroclinal rotation of ST and NS terranes in the Late Triassic to Early Jurassic caused enclosure of the CC.
Rotation continued until these terranes collided with QN in the Middle Jurassic.
Paleomagnetic declination data provide support for this model in the form of large average anticlockwise rotations for Permian to Early Jurassic sites in ST but moderate clockwise rotations for sites in QN.
Specific modern analogues for the Cordilleran orocline include the Yap trench, where the Caroline rise is colliding end‐on with the Mariana Arc and the Banda Arc, located on the southeastern “tail” of the Asian plate, which is being deformed into a tight loop by interactions with the Australian and Pacific plates.

Related Results

Detrital geochronology of the Cunningham Lake formation: an overlap succession linking Cache Creek terrane to Stikinia at ∼205 Ma
Detrital geochronology of the Cunningham Lake formation: an overlap succession linking Cache Creek terrane to Stikinia at ∼205 Ma
Detrital zircon from three coarse-grained marine siliciclastic rocks was analyzed for U–Pb, Lu–Hf, and trace element compositions to constrain the timing of deposition and sediment...
A Hierarchical Cache Architecture-Oriented Cache Management Scheme for Information-Centric Networking
A Hierarchical Cache Architecture-Oriented Cache Management Scheme for Information-Centric Networking
Information-Centric Networking (ICN) typically utilizes DRAM (Dynamic Random Access Memory) to build in-network cache components due to its high data transfer rate and low latency....
Geochronology of detrital zircons from the Elzevir and Frontenac terranes, Central Metasedimentary Belt, Grenville Province, Ontario
Geochronology of detrital zircons from the Elzevir and Frontenac terranes, Central Metasedimentary Belt, Grenville Province, Ontario
The Central Metasedimentary Belt (CMB) of the Grenville Province contains metasedimentary sequences belonging to a number of distinct tectono-stratigraphic terranes whose depositio...
Organizational Paradox
Organizational Paradox
Organizational paradox offers a theory of the nature and management of competing demands. Historically, the dominant paradigm in organizational theory depicted competing demands as...
Differential Diagnosis of Neurogenic Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: A Review
Differential Diagnosis of Neurogenic Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: A Review
Abstract Thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS) is a complex and often overlooked condition caused by the compression of neurovascular structures as they pass through the thoracic outlet. ...
Smart hardware designs for probabilistically-analyzable processor architectures
Smart hardware designs for probabilistically-analyzable processor architectures
Future Critical Real-Time Embedded Systems (CRTES), like those is planes, cars or trains, require more and more guaranteed performance in order to satisfy the increasing performanc...
Architecture of pericratonic Yukon-Tanana terrane in the northern Cordillera
Architecture of pericratonic Yukon-Tanana terrane in the northern Cordillera
West-central Yukon and eastern Alaska are characterized by widespread metamorphic rocks that form part of the allochthonous, composite Yukon-Tanana terrane and parautochthonous Nor...

Back to Top