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Geology; June, 2007; v. 35; no. 6; p. 567-570; DOI: 10.1130/G23470A.1
© 2007 Geological Society of America
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Regional magnetic anomalies, crustal strength, and the location of the northern Cordilleran fold-and-thrust belt

Richard W. Saltus*,1 and Travis L. Hudson2

1 U.S. Geological Survey, Mail Stop 964, Denver, Colorado 80225, USA
2 Applied Geology, Inc., 902 Vista del Mar, Sequim, Washington 98392, USA

The northern Cordilleran fold-and-thrust belt in Canada and Alaska is at the boundary between the broad continental margin mobile belt and the stable North American craton. The fold-and-thrust belt is marked by several significant changes in geometry: cratonward extensions in the central Yukon Territory and northeastern Alaska are separated by marginward re-entrants. These geometric features of the Cordilleran mobile belt are controlled by relations between lithospheric strength and compressional tectonic forces developed along the continental margin. Regional magnetic anomalies indicate deep thermal and compositional characteristics that contribute to variations in crustal strength. Our detailed analysis of one such anomaly, the North Slope deep magnetic high, helps to explain the geometry of the fold-and-thrust front in northern Alaska. This large magnetic anomaly is inferred to reflect voluminous mafic magmatism in an old (Devonian?) extensional domain. The presence of massive amounts of mafic material in the lower crust implies geochemical depletion of the underlying upper mantle, which serves to strengthen the lithosphere against thermal erosion by upper mantle convection. We infer that deep-source magnetic highs are an important indicator of strong lower crust and upper mantle. This stronger lithosphere forms buttresses that play an important role in the structural development of the northern Cordilleran fold-and-thrust belt.

Key Words: tectonics • geophysics • rheology • Alaska • Canada




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F. A. Macdonald, W. C. McClelland, D. P. Schrag, and W. P. Macdonald
Neoproterozoic glaciation on a carbonate platform margin in Arctic Alaska and the origin of the North Slope subterrane
Geological Society of America Bulletin, March 1, 2009; 121(3-4): 448 - 473.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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