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dc.creatorPowerman, Vladislav
dc.creatorHanson, Richard E.
dc.creatorNosova, Anna
dc.creatorGirty, Gary H.
dc.creatorHourigan, Jeremy
dc.creatorTretiakov, Andrei
dc.date.accessioned2020-05-27T19:04:50Z
dc.date.available2020-05-27T19:04:50Z
dc.date.issued2020-02-01
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1130/ges02105.1
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.tcu.edu/handle/116099117/39796
dc.identifier.urihttps://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/geosphere/article/16/1/258/579681/Nature-and-timing-of-Late-Devonianearly
dc.description.abstractThe Northern Sierra terrane is one of a series of Paleozoic terranes outboard of the western Laurentian margin that contain lithotectonic elements generally considered to have originated in settings far removed from their present relative locations. The Lower to Middle Paleozoic Shoo Fly Complex makes up the oldest rocks in the terrane and consists partly of thrust-imbricated deep-marine sedimentary strata having detrital zircon age signatures consistent with derivation from the northwestern Laurentian margin. The thrust package is structurally overlain by the Sierra City melange, which formed within a mid-Paleozoic subduction zone and contains tectonic blocks of Ediacaran tonalite and sandstone with Proterozoic to early Paleozoic detrital zircon populations having age spectra pointing to a non-western Laurentian source. Island-arc volcanic rocks of the Upper Devonian Sierra Buttes Formation unconformably overlie the Shoo Fly Complex and are spatially associated with the Bowman Lake batholith, Wolf Creek granite stock, and smaller hypabyssal felsic bodies that intrude the Shoo Fly Complex. Here, we report new results from U-Pb sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe-reverse geometry (SHRIMP-RG) dating of 15 samples of the volcanic and intrusive rocks, along with geochemical studies of the dated units. In addition, we report U-Pb laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry ages for 50 detrital zircons from a feldspathic sandstone block in the Sierra City melange, which yielded abundant Ordovician to Early Devonian (ca. 480-390 Ma) ages. Ten samples from the composite Bowman Lake batholith, which cuts some of the main thrusts in the Shoo Fly Complex, yielded an age range of 371 ± 9 Ma to 353 ± 3 Ma; felsic tuff in the Sierra Buttes Formation yielded an age of 363 ± 7 Ma; and three felsic hypabyssal bodies intruded into the Sierra City melange yielded ages of 369 ± 4 Ma to 358 ± 3 Ma. These data provide a younger age limit for assembly of the Shoo Fly Complex and indicate that arc magmatism in the Northern Sierra terrane began with a major pulse of Late Devonian (Famennian) igneous activity. The Wolf Creek stock yielded an age of 352 ± 3 Ma, showing that the felsic magmatism extended into the early Mississippian. All of these rocks have similar geochemical features with arc-type trace-element signatures, consistent with the interpretation that they constitute a petrogenetically linked volcano-plutonic system. Field evidence shows that the felsic hypabyssal intrusions in the Sierra City melange were intruded while parts of it were still unlithified, indicating that a relatively narrow time span separated subduction-related deformation in the Shoo Fly Complex and onset of Late Devonian arc magmatism. Following recent models for Paleozoic terrane assembly in the western Cordillera, we infer that the Shoo Fly Complex together with strata in the Roberts Mountains allochthon in Nevada migrated south along a sinistral transform boundary prior to the onset of arc magmatism in the Northern Sierra terrane. We suggest that the Shoo Fly Complex arrived close to the western Laurentian margin at the same time as the Roberts Mountains allochthon was thrust over the passive margin during the Late Devonian-early Mississippian Antler orogeny. This led to a change in plate kinematics that caused development of a west-facing Late Devonian island arc on the Shoo Fly Complex. Due to slab rollback, the arc front migrated onto parts of the Sierra City melange that had only recently been incorporated into the accretionary complex. In the melange, blocks of Ediacaran tonalite, as well as sandstones having detrital zircon populations with non-western Laurentian sources, may have been derived from the Yreka and Trinity terranes in the eastern Klamath Mountains, where similar rock types occur. If so, this suggests that these Klamath terranes were in close proximity to the developing accretionary complex in the Northern Sierra terrane in the Late Devonian.
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherGeoScienceWorld
dc.sourceGeosphere
dc.subjectabsolute age
dc.subjectCalifornia
dc.subjectCarboniferous
dc.subjectdates
dc.subjectDevonian
dc.subjectgeochemistry
dc.subjectigneous rocks
dc.subjectisland arcs
dc.subjectLaurentiav
dc.subjectlithostratigraphy
dc.subjectLower Mississippian
dc.subjectmagmatism
dc.subjectmajor elements
dc.subjectMississippian
dc.subjectnesosilicates
dc.subjectNorthern California
dc.subjectorthosilicates
dc.subjectPaleozoic
dc.subjectplate tectonics
dc.subjectplutonic rocks
dc.subjectsedimentary rocks
dc.subjectShoo Fly Complex
dc.subjectSierra Nevada
dc.subjectsilicates
dc.subjectstratigraphic units
dc.subjecttrace elements
dc.subjectU/Pb
dc.subjectUnited States
dc.subjectvolcanic rocks
dc.subjectzircon
dc.subjectzircon group
dc.subjectnorthern Sierra Nevada
dc.subjectTaylorsville Sequence
dc.titleNature and timing of Late Devonian-early Mississippian island-arc magmatism in the Northern Sierra terrane and implications for regional Paleozoic plate tectonics
dc.typeArticle
dc.rights.holderVladislav Powerman et al.
dc.rights.licenseCC BY-NC (no version specified)
local.collegeCollege of Science and Engineering
local.departmentGeological Sciences
local.personsHanson (GEOL)


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