中新世俯冲过程中的深板块碰撞导致新西兰峡湾沿地壳规模逆断层抬升

Q1 Earth and Planetary Sciences
GSA Today Pub Date : 2019-09-01 DOI:10.1130/GSATG399A.1
K. Klepeis, L. Webb, H. Blatchford, J. Schwartz, R. Jongens, R. Turnbull, H. Stowell
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引用次数: 12

摘要

新西兰西南部的一个新的多学科项目结合了地质和地球物理数据,展示了深层岩石圈沉积是如何以及为什么通过早期海洋-大陆俯冲带的上部板块垂直转移的。一项关键发现包括两个陡峭、向下弯曲的反向断层带,它们在中新世晚期抬升和叠瓦了白垩纪下地壳、中地壳和上地壳的大片。地球化学和结构分析,结合40Ar/39Ar地质年代学和已发表的地震层析成像图像,表明逆断层形成于8–7 Ma,是俯冲海洋岩石圈和先前俯冲物质之间深度(约100 km)碰撞的结果。这次碰撞局部缩短并重新激活了从上地幔到地球表面的两个地壳尺度剪切带。这一事件在一个新的岩石圈尺度剖面中得到了总结,它帮助我们回答了一些长期存在的问题,即峡湾独特的下地壳暴露的起源,以及它们告诉我们,随着俯冲的开始,继承的结构如何通过岩石圈垂直转移运动。引言在新西兰西南部,澳大利亚板块的海洋岩石圈在间歇泉海沟斜向俯冲在太平洋板块的大陆岩石圈之下(图1A)。在海沟东北部,俯冲板块在Fiordland下方旋转并变陡至垂直,在那里它与阿尔卑斯断层汇合(Reyners et al.,2017),这是一个约850公里的转换,自约25 Ma以来,已经积累了约480公里的水平位移(Sutherland和Norris,1995)。该地区引起了地质学家的极大兴趣,部分原因是它是少数几个可以直接观察到早期海洋-大陆俯冲带表面构造记录的地方之一(Mao et al.,2017)。它还代表了地球上最深的安第斯式大陆弧(Ducea et al.,2015)。在这里,我们利用这个独特的环境来探索自中新世早期俯冲开始以来,峡湾的表面和地壳是如何对岩石圈地幔深处发生的事件做出反应的。在过去的几年里,我们对岩石圈内形成的垂直联系的了解得益于我们从岩石记录中提取信息的能力的提高。例如,将地球化学和高精度地质年代学与结构分析相结合的断层带研究创新方法,增强了我们将变形历史与其他过程在大范围内联系起来的能力(例如,Haines等人,2016;Schwartz等人,2016年;Williams等人,2017)。与此同时,全球远程地震层析成像的新方法正在以前所未有的细节揭示数百万年前被俯冲到地幔中的物质的几何形状和范围(Wu et al.,2016;Reyners等人,2017)。这些成像的板块可以与地表地质和板块运动学相结合,以揭示以前隐藏的构造历史。这些创新和许多其他创新共同提供了新的机会,以确定随着俯冲带的形成和发展,地表构造记录如何与地幔中发生的过程联系起来(例如,刘,2015;刘等人,2017;Kisling和Schlunegger,2018)。在这篇文章中,我们将结构、地球化学和地质年代数据与地震层析成像获得的上地幔图像相结合,重建了峡湾地区新生代晚期的构造史。这些结果为大陆边缘俯冲开始的过程提供了新的见解,包括覆盖板块内垂直运动的原因和后果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Deep Slab Collision during Miocene Subduction Causes Uplift along Crustal-Scale Reverse Faults in Fiordland, New Zealand
A new multidisciplinary project in southwest New Zealand that combines geological and geophysical data shows how and why deep lithospheric dis‐ placements were transferred vertically through the upper plate of an incipient ocean-continent subduction zone. A key discovery includes two zones of steep, downward-curving reverse faults that uplifted and imbricated large slices of Cretaceous lower, middle, and upper crust in the Late Miocene. Geochemical and structural analyses combined with 40Ar/39Ar geochronology and published images from seismic tomography suggest that the reverse faults formed at 8–7 Ma as a consequence of a deep (~100 km) collision between subducting oceanic lithosphere and previously subducted material. This collision localized shortening and reactivated two crustalscale shear zones from the upper mantle to Earth’s surface. The event, which is summarized in a new lithosphericscale profile, is helping us answer some long-standing questions about the origin of Fiordland’s unique lower-crustal exposures and what they tell us about how inherited structures can transfer motion vertically through the lithosphere as subduction initiates. INTRODUCTION In southwest New Zealand, oceanic lithosphere of the Australian Plate subducts obliquely beneath continental lithosphere of the Pacific Plate at the Puysegur Trench (Fig. 1A). Northeast of the trench, the subducted slab rotates and steepens to vertical below Fiordland, where it joins the Alpine fault (Reyners et al., 2017), an ~850 km transform that has accumulated some 480 km of horizontal displacement since ca. 25 Ma (Sutherland and Norris, 1995). This region has generated great interest among geologists, in part because it is one of only a few places where the surface tectonic record of an incipient ocean-continent sub‐ duction zone can be observed directly (Mao et al., 2017). It also represents Earth’s deepest exposed example of an Andean-style continental arc (Ducea et al., 2015). Here, we use this unique setting to explore how Fiordland’s surface and crust responded to events that occurred deep within the lithospheric mantle since subduction began in the Early Miocene. Over the past few years, our under‐ standing of the vertical links that develop within the lithosphere has benefitted from improvements in our ability to extract information from the rock record. Innovative approaches to studying fault zones that combine geochemistry and high-precision geochronology with structural analyses, for example, have enhanced our capacity to relate deformation histories to other processes across a wide range of scales (e.g., Haines et al., 2016; Schwartz et al., 2016; Williams et al., 2017). At the same time, new methods in global teleseismic tomography are revealing the geometry and extent of material that was subducted into the mantle millions of years ago in unprecedented detail (Wu et al., 2016; Reyners et al., 2017). These imaged slabs can be integrated with surface geology and plate kinematics to reveal previously hidden tectonic histories. Together, these and many other innovations are providing new opportunities to determine how surface tectonic records connect to processes occurring in the mantle as subduction zones form and develop over time (e.g., Liu, 2015; Liu et al., 2017; Kissling and Schlunegger, 2018). In this article, we integrate structural, geochemical, and geochronologic data with images of the upper mantle derived from seismic tomography to reconstruct the late Cenozoic tectonic history of Fiordland. The results provide new insights into the process of subduction initiation at continental margins, including the causes and consequences of vertical motions within the overriding plate.
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GSA Today
GSA Today Earth and Planetary Sciences-Geology
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