Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8912906 | Earth-Science Reviews | 2018 | 147 Pages |
Abstract
Although potential tectonic mechanisms for shortening in the Mexican orogen remain debated, our analysis indicates that orogenic wedge development took place in a retroarc setting that postdated consolidation of the hinterland oceanic assemblages, which lay offshore western Mexico during Albian time. Orogen development followed a protracted period of early Mesozoic extension that affected most of the Mexico due to the combined effects of Laurentia-Gondwana separation and long-term Triassic-Jurassic rollback of a paleo-Farallon plate. Slab rollback ultimately resulted in the development of a marginal basin, the Arperos basin, between a rifted Late Jurassic magmatic arc and mainland Mexico. Initial shortening in the Mexican orogen, which followed Arperos basin closure and Guerrero superterrane accretion by ~Â 5-10Â Ma, was coeval with voluminous magmatism on the Pacific margin of Mexico, drowning of the western carbonate platforms and onset of foreland-basin sedimentation in Cenomanian time. Subduction of the Farallon slab from early Late Cretaceous to Eocene time was thus the primary driving mechanism of shortening in the Mexican orogen.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Elisa Fitz-DÃaz, Timothy F. Lawton, Edgar Juárez-Arriaga, Gabriel Chávez-Cabello,