학술논문

Rock and age relationships within the Talkeetna forearc accretionary complex in the Nelchina area, southern Alaska
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences = Revue Canadienne des Sciences de la Terre. 57(6):709-724
Subject
05A|Petrology - igneous and metamorphic rocks
03|Geochronology
absolute age
accretionary wedges
Alaska
amphibole group
Ar/Ar
bedrock
Border Ranges Fault
chain silicates
chemical composition
Chugach Terrane
clinoamphibole
Cretaceous
deformation
dikes
faults
gabbros
hornblende
igneous rocks
intrusions
Jurassic
lava
McHugh Complex
melange
Mesozoic
mineral composition
Nelchina Alaska
Nelchina Glacier
nesosilicates
orthosilicates
pillow lava
plutonic rocks
silicates
Talkeetna Arc
tectonics
U/Pb
United States
X-ray diffraction data
zircon
zircon group
Language
English
ISSN
0008-4077
Abstract
Subduction zone processes are challenging to study because of the rarity of good exposures and the complexity of rock relationships within accretionary prisms. We report the results of field mapping and petrographic, geochemical, and geochronological analyses of the McHugh Complex accretionary prism melange in south-central Alaska that was recently exposed due to retreat of the Nelchina Glacier. Our new mapping and analyses of the melange, as well as adjacent Talkeetna arc intrusives, suggests that the previously mapped trace of the Border Ranges fault should shift northward in this location. Detailed petrographic analysis places this melange exposure with the Potter Creek assemblage of the McHugh Complex. Blocks of pillow lavas within the melange have both mid-ocean ridge basalt and intra-plate geochemical affinities, attesting to the complex relations of subduction-zone inputs in an alternating erosive-accretionary margin. A new zircon U-Pb age and geochemical analyses of a set of felsic dikes that cross-cut the accretionary sequence provide constraints on the regional tectonic evolution, including near-trench plutonism associated with the migration of a subducting spreading ridge along the southern Alaska margin during the Paleocene-Eocene. The McHugh section and cross-cutting dikes in this location are pervasively hydrothermally altered, which we attribute to elevated temperatures related to ridge subduction. Late-stage motion along the Border Ranges fault system, which is also recorded in the area, may also have contributed to the widespread alteration. Our data indicate that the Talkeetna volcanic arc and associated accretionary prism sediments were in their current configuration by 55 Ma.