Tectonophysics, Elsevier
199
191 (1991) 199-212
Science Publishers
B.V., Amsterdam
A critical review of tectonic processes at continental margin orogens Steven Department
H. Edelman
of Geological Sciences, University of Tennessee, Knoxville,
(Received
November
30, 1987; revised version accepted
TN 37996-1410,
August
USA
20, 1988)
ABSTRACT Edelman, S.H., 1991. A critical review of tectonic processes at continental margin orogens. Coward (Editors), Deformation and Plate Tectonics. Tectonophysics, 191: 199-212.
In: A. PCrez-EstaCn
and M.P
A “cordilleran-type” orogen has previously been defined as contractional deformation of a continental margin due to subcontinental subduction. The plate tectonic setting of cordilleran-type orogenesis is fundamentally different from that of “collisional” orogenesis. Intracontinental orogens such as the Himalayas and Alps form by collision between a continental margin and a continental margin subduction zone. Orogens at continental margins may form due to subcontinental subduction (cordilleran-type orogeny), or due to collision of a continental margin with an intra-oceanic subduction zone which is typically followed by a reversal of subduction polarity. In the latter case, collisional orogenesis may proceed along with the reversed, subcontinental subduction. Modem arcs are mostly extensional or neutral, so subduction hangingwall contraction is not a necessary consequence of subduction. Crustal contraction in known collisional orogens lasts for tens of millions of years, so collisional deformation at a continental margin may last for tens of millions of years after arc-continent collision and subduction reversal. Collisional orogenesis is a predictable consequence of subduction, and collisional deformation is kinematically linked to the kinematics of subduction. Noncollisional cordilleran-type orogenesis is not predicted by plate theory. A geologic history that would demonstrate noncollisional orogenesis is a magmatic arc built into a passive margin sequence with strong deformation but without an earlier arc or ophiolite accretion event; this history has not been recognized in the geologic record. The classic examples of cordilleran-type orogens, including the Cretaceous-Cenozoic of the Andes and the Jurassic-early Tertiary of the western United States, may be interpreted as arc-continent collisions. However, the youngest increments of deformation in these two orogens occurred 100 million years after the youngest collisions and are thus difficult to ascribe to collisional processes. Notwithstanding the long time scales, these deformations occurred at the end of space-time continua of probable collisional orogenies. Alternatively, these deformations may represent lithosphere-scale fault-bend folding, duplex folding, backthrusting, and/or out-of-sequence forethrusting during shallow subduction.
Introduction
In
their
tween plate Phanerozoic sively studied,
Bird (1970) proposed
erogenic belts have been intenand the structural complexity of
Archean and Proterozoic basement terranes cates that the erogenic processes of crustal
indicon-
0 1991 - Elsevier Science Publishers
that mountain
beand
belts develop
in two fundamentally different plate tectonic settings: (1) A “collisional” orogen forms when a continental margin intersects a subduction zone. The subduction may be at a continental margin subduction zone in a continent-continent collision (Fig. la), an intra-oceanic subduction zone with an oceanic arc in an arc-continent collision (Fig. lb), or an intra-oceanic subduction zone without an arc in an ocean-continent (ophiolite emplacement) collision (Fig. lc). These three types
traction, metamorphism, uplift, and erosion have been fundamental aspects of the thickening and tectonic stabilization of continental crust throughout earth history. However, the problem of the plate tectonic settings of erogenic deformation is unresolved. The problem is most acute for continental margin orogens. 0040-1951/91/$03.50
classic paper on the relationships tectonics and orogenesis, Dewey
B.V.
S.H. EDELMAN
200
(a) Continent-continent
collision
review processes with emphasis
SUTURE
duced
by
produced
of continental
margin
on distinguishing
subcontinental by earlier
orogenesis,
deformation
subduction
pro-
from
that
arc collision.
EANIC CRUST
Previous ideas on cordilleran-type (b) Arc-continent
Dewey
MOLASSE
orogen
sJiFi~b*o~;zgFTA,
and
evolved
thotectonic Ocean (ophiolitekcontinent collision
orogen
“Andean
(1970)
cordilleran-type
from Dewey’s (1969) “or-
which
was
“Atlantic
associated
with
type” margin
type” margin.
to
The concept
of a cordilleran
orogen was inspired
pable thrust
from the western Americas that folding, and cleavage formation
evidence faulting,
occurred (d) Cordilleran-type
directly
of a passive
a convergent
SEA‘CW
Bird’s
orogen”
conversion (cl
orogenesis
collision
contemporaneously
subduction.
with
by the inesca-
subcontinental
Dewey and Bird (1970) suggested
that
high heat flow and plutonism
in the marginal
caused
of a “mobile
the rise and expansion
arc core”
(Fig. Id) beneath an “erogenic welt.” The mobile core would expand toward the continent and drive
Fig. 1. Plate tectonic leran-type development continent (1970).
settings
(d) orogens.
of collisional
Situations
of an arc edifice; collisions”
with
dashed
reversal
both
in this paper. lines
(a, b, c) and cordil-
(b) and
representing
(c) differ
are referred From
only
in
to as “arc-
Dewey
incipient
and
Bird
subduction
in (b) and (c) from Dewey (1976).
thrust sheets in that direction, and gravity slides would move in the same direction. This kinematic picture does not require any bulk shortening of the continental crust; any crustal thickening may be by addition of igneous rocks to the system. Variations of Dewey and Bird’s (1970) “mobile core” idea (Fig. Id) included a ductility contrast between Davis, of
of collisional orogen are mechanically driven by partial subduction of buoyant continental crust. (2) A “cordilleran-type” orogen forms above a continental margin subduction zone and is thermally driven (Fig. Id). The arc-continent and ocean-continent collisions (Fig. lb,c) differ only in whether an arc edifice forms, so both will hereafter be referred to as arc-continent collisions. In these collisions, subduction must reverse polarity and dip beneath the continent if convergence is to continue. Any deformation of the continental margin would then occur in a cordilleran-type setting (Fig. Id), but it is then unclear whether the deformation is driven by the subcontinental subduction or by the earlier collision. The purpose of this paper is to critically
heated
and unheated
crust (Burchfiel
1975), a push from the “hydrostatic
a fluid-like
rock
welt”
(Smith,
1981)
and head and
forceful arc to
injection and spreading of plutons drive thrust sheets (Allmendinger
in the and
Jordan, pointed
1981; Hamilton, 1985). Rutland (1973) out that circum-Pacific orogenies were not
due to repeated opening and closing of the Pacific Ocean in Wilson cycles; he also suggested that accretion of crustal fragments was not of importance. Mechanical explanations for cordilleran-type deformation in a subduction hangingwall have also been proposed. Coney (1972, 1973a,b) pointed out that the ages of erogenic events in western North America in the late Mesozoic and Cenozoic correspond to times of changes in sea-floor spreading geometry in the Atlantic Ocean. He interpreted this correlation as compressional failure at the leading (western) edge of an “ac-
TECTONIC
PROCESSES
tively driving”
North
sively overrode east-dipping
AT CONTINENTAL
MARGIN
American
relatively
Benioff
plate that succes-
tion of younger
lithosphere.
subcontinental,
wall orogenesis
due to shallowly
orogenesis
tion was suggested
passive,
zones.
201
OROGENS
This
was
specifically noncollisional (Coney, 1973a), and the dominant erogenic vergence was considered to be against
the “absolute”
hot spot reference plate
(Coney,
interpreted
frame,
1973b). oceanic
orogens
in terms
reference plates,
plate motion
of the actively
Wilson arcs
of active
and
and
Roeder’s between
at convergent
(1973) treatment
subduction
belts interpreted thetic” in that particularly
Burke
in a
driving (1972)
cordilleran-tie
motion,
frame, of the subducting
respectively,
direction,
in a mantle
of the relationships in erogenic
cordilleran-type orogens as “antithe erogenic vergence direction,
in foreland
settings,
was opposite
to
that of the coeval subduction (Fig. Id). This situation contrasts with the “synthetic” collisional orogens (Fig. la-c). Roeder (1975) suggested that antithetic lithospheric deformation above a subduction zone (cordilleran-type due to changes in subduction dip would above
spreading
the subduction
overlying back-arc
cause
lithosphere, spreading.
zone
orogenesis) may be dip. A decrease in
cordilleran-type
Moores
(1970)
western
Americas
collisions
orogenesis
-
would
occur during episodes of decreasing subduction rate. This analysis contrasts with the suggestion of Dalziel (1986) that cordilleran-type orogenesis in the Andes was caused by an increased subduction rate which may increase the horizontal compressive stress. Molnar and Atwater (1978) pointed out a rough correlation between the ages of actively subducting oceanic lithosphere at various convergent margins and the type of tectonic regime active in the associated arc. They concluded that arc spreading is associated with subduction of lithosphere older than 50-100 Ma, and that cordilleran-type orogenesis is associated with subduc-
the
subduc(1977),
et al. (1983)
subduction
proposed
that
was due
as in Fig.
ophiolite away from
lb,c,
with
subsequent
A continental
be due to the collision.
margin
after each reversal,
emphasized
the similarities
sions
subduction
arc
but orogenesis
Dickinson
(1971)
of arc-continent
colli-
reversal
orogenesis.
in the
dipped
develop
and
orogenesis,
orogenesis
to arc and
would
(cordiller~)
hangingwall
margin
would
to
Dewey
“activation”
and
Horsfield
(1970) suggested that arc accretion and subduction reversal may be a “partial explanation” for continental margin orogens. Gill (1982) suggested that “‘erogenic andesite’ rarely accompanies orogeny,” thus emphasizing that magmatism, even at “Andean-style” accreted
in dip would cause
Jordan
continental
reversals.
of the as
dipping
and Reynolds
in which subduction
and extension
An increase
to for
characteristic
type orogen. Because higher subduction rates may lead to shallower subduction and visa versa (Luyendyk, 1970) extension would occur during episodes of increasing convergence rate, and con-
contrast
wedge
contraction of the mantle wedge and of the lithosphere, and would be manifested as a cordilleran-
traction
In
mechanisms
of the mantle
and would be manifested
hanging-
Bird (1988), and Isacks (1988).
subduction
margins.
by Coney
et al. (1983)
the continent
and overriding
dip and vergence
Allmendinger
Subduction
margins,
should
not
of orogenesis.
With
fragments
prompted
crustal
a defining
the interest
in
by Coney
et
al. (1980), some workers have proposed that collisions of displaced terranes may be responsible for all orogenesis
that was previously
ascribed
ple subduction in cordilleran-type Avraham et al., 7981; Nur and 1982).
to sim-
orogens (BenBen Avraham,
Modem are-trench systems and oceanic plateaus
Cordilleran-type
orogenesis
is not a necessary
consequence of subduction. Modern arc systems display a variety of tectonic regimes, but most are sites of subduction hangingwall extension. Hamilton (1981) concluded that “magmatic arcs are extensional at all crustal levels.” In their synthesis of arc structure, Karig and Sharman (1975) cited repeated arc rifting and formation of back-arc basins and remnant arcs as characteristic of arc settings. This rifting is not restricted to intra-oceanic arcs, as evidenced by formation of the Sea of Japan. Some arcs are not deforming appreciably, and the controlling factors of arc extension are
S.H. EDELMAN
202
incompletely
known
(1981) reviewed
(Uyeda,
evidence
not characterized
1986).
Matthews
that arcs in general
by compression
normal
Geometry and tectonic setting
are In collisional
to the
“synthetic”
trench.
finally
The only part of a typical arc that is “erogenic” is the accretionary all arc-trench tional,
prism which is contractional
systems.
or neutral
regions
The extensional,
tectonics
is independent
tional
tectonics
With
the
modern, orogen.
actualistic Active
contrac-
of the arc and rear-arc
Some
proponents theory
and fold overturning,
direction
This
and
Well known
examples
Himalayan
orogen
is no
the
subduction
and Tapponnier, Mattauer, resulting (Milnes,
applicable
emphasized
south-vergent
from northward
arcs in Middle
of a universally
the
thrust from
(1970)
beneath
1975; Coward
subduction
1978;
1980),
Roeder,
northward
include resulting
Tibet (Molnar 1985; orogen
beneath
Italy
the south-vergent
Guinea
subduction
collisional
Alpine
from southward in the New
was
and Butler,
1986), the north-vergent
belt
to the
concept
in Dewey
there
Bird’s
The
of over-
is opposite
of subduction.
is
that
basin.
or direction
(Fig. la-c).
margin
of orogenesis
thrusting
ocean
direction,
orogens
America and the Cascade Range of North America do not maintain subduction hangingwall orogens. collisional
vergence
implicit
of a cordilleran-type
continental
the intervening
dominant dip
vergence
contrac-
of the Andes, example
closes
the dominant
1973) to the subduction
plate boundary.
of the universally
of the convergent
exception
in
orogens,
(Roeder,
region beneath
resulting the
New
modem abundance of oceanic plateaus and the inevitability of their active and future collisions
Guinea
with continental margin subduction zones (BenAvraham et al., 1981; Nur and Ben-Avraham,
al., 1987), and the west-vergent Taiwan thrust belt resulting from the east-dipping Manila Trench
1982). Collisions of oceanic plateaus with subduction zones must be an important tectonic process, but whether these collisions cause strong deformation of subduction hangingwalls is not clear. These
subduction (Page and All orogens, to various gences. Examples of “antithetic” vergence zone”, which is a late,
collisions magmatism
may cause temporary cessation of in the upper plate (Nur and Ben-
and Timor
and Pfiffner, Canadian
Cordillera
dominant
erogenic
collision
matics of collisional
of the Sula platform subduction
(plateau)
zone
in
with an
Indonesia,
is
manifested by imbrication of the lower plate plateau rather than by deformation of the upper plate (Silver et al., 1983a). Accretion of oceanic plateaus and other crustal fragments probably causes major orogenesis only if the plateaus are bounded by active subduction subduct continental masses.
zones that partially
Tectonic mechanisms morphism (Oxburgh
(Price,
beneath
wedges”
1986).
vergence
The
mimics
in the earlier
the
kine-
subduction.
thickening results
1979; Karig et
Suppe, 1981; Ernst, 1982). degrees, display two verthe opposite, subordinate, include the Alpine “root south-vergent fold (Milnes
1980), and “tectonic
Avraham, 1981; McGeary et al., 1985). But deformation in modern plateau collisions, such as the intra-oceanic
arcs (Hamilton,
by thrust faulting
in burial and
and Turcotte,
in
and other
and Barrovian
meta-
front
suture
of the
1974; Oxburgh
and
En-
gland, 1980). Erosion and possibly normal faulting (Platt, 1986) results in exposure of these metamorphic rocks in the “metamorphic core zone” of the orogen. Collisional orogens do not display associ-
relevant to con-
ated magmatic arcs. The limited crustal melting that occurs in collision zones is a second order consequence of collisional crustal thickening (En-
In order to evaluate in detail the similarities of continental margin orogens to well known collisional orogens, a brief overview of the geometry and chronology of collisional orogens is presented here.
gland and Thompson, 1986). Collisional processes can form erogenic belts without the operation of subduction hangingwall processes. Well known collisions between continents (Fig. la) cannot be followed by subduction reversal in the vicinity of the orogen and deformation thus occurs without subduction of oceanic lithosphere.
Aspects of collisional orogenesis tinental margin orogens
TECTONIC
PROCESSES
AT CONTINENTAL
MARGiN
203
OROGENS
ChXWUlOgy
berlain,
Deformation
Caribbean,
in
from the internal the external
collisional
fold-thrust
of years.
sional
implies
orogenesis
margins
millions
after
reversal.
tion of collisional
may
initial
began
curred
arc collision
Several examples
orogenesis
collision
in the Eocene
and
of the dura-
are reviewed
The continent-continent layas
orogeneof
is still
active today, indicating a minimum duration of 40 million years of crustal contraction (Molnar and Tapponnier, 1975; Powell, 1.979; Klootwijk and Radha~s~amurty, continent collision late Eocene
1981). The microcontinentin the Alps began no later than
(40 Ma) and lasted until
(5 Ma) indicating
a minimum
duration
the Pliocene of 35 mil-
lion years of crustal contraction (Dewey 1973; Milnes and Pfiffner, 1980; Trtimpy, Butler,
1986)
and the collision
et al., 1982;
may have begun
as
system
hangingwall
succession
or other accretion
type of orogen;
sive margins
to convergent
mechanisms
crustal
orogens
and subduction
margin
(Dewey,
a convergent sonably
ini-
margins.
lies
of pas-
There are two
continental
margin
(Fig. 2a,b). This process is compartly because the oldest, most
Australia
margin
of orogenesis”
subduction may initiate (Fig. 2) (Dickinson, 1971): (1) Subduction may initiate at a previously
This type of subduction
Continental
If the orogen
for conversion
by which
since the younger collision. The active arc-continent collision between New Guinea and northern 1979).
events.
problem
a mechanism
dense oceanic lithosphere generally located along
(Hamilton,
em-
such that the absense of is established, then any
deformation there lasted from the Late Jurassic until at least the Paleocene (60 Ma) (Price and Mountjoy, 1970) an interval of at least 40 m. y.
Ma) and is still in progress
not
ophiolite
Dewey (1969, pp_ 189) suggested
that the “fundamental in discovering
passive margin monly invoked
(5-24
which does
to cordiller~-type erogenic processes. Subduction must initiate at a continental margin to form this
Jurassic and the second (about 100 Ma)(Monger
no later than the Miocene
contact
contraction within and behind the conmargin arc could reasonably be ascribed
early as 100-130 Ma (Gillet et al., 1986). Terrane accretion in the Canadian Cordillera may have involved two major collisions, the first in the Late
began
the volcanic-pluto~c
for arc collision,
is preserved and exposed an early accretion event crustal tinental
oc-
The crucial
depositional-int~sive
margin
evidence
placement,
an orogen
contraction
arc collision.
in which
is in primary
display
of cordilleran-type
of such an orogen would be a paired
basic
in the mid-Cretaceous et al., 1982). Foreland
operation
would be to identify
without an earlier
arc-trench
of the northern
1979).
subduction
characteristics arc
the
with a passive
here.
in the Hima-
(40 Ma) and
for
processes
of colli-
last for tens
Mattson,
A test erogenic in which
The duration that collisional
sis at continental of years
migrates
core zone toward
belt and lasts for several
tens of millions
subduction
orogens
metamorphic
1988; Jurassic-Cretaceous
1969; margin
contraction linked
in an ocean basin is the rifted continental
Smith,
1976;
initiation without
would
1988). produce
a collision,
in this setting
to subcontinental
Ellis,
could subduction
and
be rea(Fig.
2b). This situation has not been clearly documented in the geologic record, so there is no clear
tiation
evidence that direct conversion to a convergent margin has ever occurred. This test does not dis-
Subduction may reverse and dip beneath the continent after arc-continent collision (Fig. lb,c). Examples of active subduction reversal have been reported from the southwest Pacific (New Guinea
prove the cordilleran-type erogenic model, but rather that the tectonic situation that would demonstrate its operation, i.e. continental margin subduction without pre-existing collisions, has not been realized. (2) Subduction may initiate within an ocean basin and approach a passive margin, in which case a component of subduction must dip away from the continent (Fig. 2a,c). Intra-oceanic subduction initiation is documented in the Aleutian
Trench, Hamilton, 1979; Cooper and Taylor, 1987; Flores and Wetar thrusts, Silver et al., 1983b) and have been inferred for erogenic belts (Nevadan orogen, Moores, 1970, 1972; Schweickert and Cowan, 1975; Cretaceous of British Columbia, Tempelman-Kluit, 1979; Lambert and Cham-
S.H. EDELMAN
204
PASSIVE
MARGIN
DIRECT CON-VERSION TO CONVERGENT MARGIN
c2= I//
Cordilleran-type orogenesis
Cordilleran-type OR collisional orogenesis Fig. 2. Two mechanisms Schematic oceanic
passive
for converting
margin.
Random
crust. (b) Subduction
be cordillerantype, lithosphere
and an arc (“v”
subduction
flips to form
deformation
initiates
but this geologic pattern)
a passive
pattern
at passive history
to a convergent
margin
basement;
prism-arc collision.
or ophiolite
plate. pair
tectonically
margin, and subduction may reverse (Fig. 2d). This tectonic history is well documented, but it is whether ensuing crustal contraction
due to subcontinental
(c) Passive
(d) Passive
margin
as in (b). Orogenesis
The two mechanisms
fragment
and their implications lines = shelf-slope-rise
and forms an accretionary
arc-trench system (Cooper et al., 1976) and in several parts of the southwest Pacific (Hamilton, 1979; Ben-Avraham and Uyeda, 1982). The continental margin eventually enters the subduction zone, the intra-oceanic arc is thrust over the
uncertain
margin
horizontal
has not been documented.
in the overriding
an accretionary
or the earlier arccontinent
margin
= continental
is
subduction and cordilleran-
type erogenic processes, or to the arc collision and collisional erogenic processes (Fig. 2d).
prism-arc
pair. Orogenesis
margin
is on a subducting
enters
subduction
in this setting
are distinguished
emplaced
for erogenic sedimentary
could
by the absence
over the continental
processes. wedge;
in this setting plate,
zone, arrests
would
with oceanic
subduction,
be due either (b) or presence
(a)
black =
and
to cordilleran (d) of an arc
margin.
larly crucial because this system represents the only candidate for an active cordilleran-type orogen and thus the only actuahstic example. Andes The
Andes display a well developed, Cretavolcanic-plutonic continental
ceous-Cenozoic,
margin arc related to subduction, and a Cretaceous-Cenozoic fold and thrust belt along the continental
side of the arc (Fig. 3a) (Ham and
Examples of cordilleran-type orogens revisited
Herrera, Faucher
1963; Ahlfeld, 1970; Gansser, and Savoyat, 1973; Audebaud
1973; et al.,
Dewey and Bird’s (1970) classic examples of cordilleran-type orogens were the CretaceousCenozoic of the Andes, the Jurassic-early Tertiary of the western United States, and the early Paleozoic Taconic _orogeny of the northern Appalachians. Interpretation of the Andes is particu-
1973). Deformation “peaks” occurred in the Late Cretaceous, Eocene, and Miocene-Pliocene (Martinez, 1980). Andean deformation has generally been attributed to subcontinental subduction (Hamilton, 1969a,b; James, 1971) and several studies have shown a correlation between late Cenozoic deformation and the geometry of sub-
TECTONIC
PROCESSES
AT CONTINENTAL
MARGIN
OROGENS
205
Cretaceous-
ene-Holocene
Cretaceous-
REVERSED
(a)
Subduction
SUBDUCTION
SYSTEM
Continental
zone COLLISIONAL
Fig. 3. Sketch
maps
Jurassic-early
Tertiary
diagram)
followed
showing
major
by subduction
examples,
features
of the western
Trrv
the oceanic
reversal
States.
(“reversed
arcs and ophiolites
probably
ducting oceanic lithosphere (Nur and Ben-Avraham, 1981; Allmendinger et al., 1983; Jordan et al., 1983). There is evidence for arc and ophiolite collisions
immediately
preceeding
the main
orogens
Both examples subduction
Creta-
Foreland fold and thrust belt
Metamorphic core zone
of the “cordilleran-type”
United
of (a) the Cretaceous-Cenozoic
can be interpreted system”
formed
arc
OROGEN
::I::.;.*..; Oceanic arcs and ophiolites
margin
as arc collisions
in diagram).
a fringing
From
Andes (“collisional
references
cited
arc system near the continenta
and (b) the orogen”
in text.
in
In both
margin.
continental margin (Bruhn, 1979; Dalziel and Palmer, 1979). In contrast, Dalziel and Forsythe (1985) stated that “accretion of oceanic terranes is not known
to have occurred”
Mesozoic-Cenozoic
during
the late
of the Andes.
ceous-Cenozoic Andean orogenesis, but their full extent is unknown (Fig. 3a). The basement for the
The “metamorphic core” of the Andes includes cleaved rocks associated with Cretaceous arc and
Andean orogeny is a Proterozoic-Paleozoic
ophiohte accretion in the southern Andes (Bruhn,
ter-
rane amalgam that was consolidated before the end of the Paleozoic (Ramos et al., 1986). The earliest event in the Andean orogeny was emplacement of ophiolite and oceanic arc complexes in the mid-Cretaceous in the southernmost Andes (Bruhn, 1979; Dalziel and Palmer, 1979; Saunders et al., 1979) and the northern Andes (Bourgois et al., 1982; Aspden and McCourt, 1986; Spadea et al., 1987) (Fig. 3a). Accreted oceanic terranes may be more extensive but concealed by volcanic cover (Howell et al., 1985; Aspden and McCourt, 1986). Gansser (1973, pp. 97) stated that strong deformation was preceeded by ophiolites. The accreted arc and ophiolite fragments probably formed near the
1979; Dalziel and Palmer, 1979) and in the northem Andes (Aspden and McCourt, 1986) and Late Cretaceous and Eocene schistosities in part of the central Andes (Martinez, 1980; Farrar et al., 1988) (Fig. 3a). Barrovian metamorphism (kyanite and garnet + staurolite), and Late Cretaceous with mid-Cretaceous in the “collision-style (Nelson et al., 1980; The late Cenozoic foreland fold and
continent-directed
nappes,
foreland thrusting associated arc collision is documented orogeny” of Tierra de1 Fuego Nelson, 1982). orogeny is restricted to the thrust belt in the Eastern
Cordillera, Sub-Andes, and Pampean Ranges. This deformation is dominated by east-vergent (conti-
206
S.H. EDELMAN
nent-directed)
and by subduction
thrust faults of Eocene-Holocene
reversal
represented
by the
age, with block fault uplifts in the Pampean Ranges
Sierra-Franciscan
(Herrero-Ducloux,
Moores, 1984). The presence of ophiolites (Saleeby,
1963; Ham and Herrera, 1963;
Martinez, 1980; Allmendinger et al., 1983; Jordan
1982,
et al., 1983; Roeder, 1988).
Schweickert
The
Andean
orogeny
Cretaceous-early
apparently
reflects
a
Cenozoic arc and ophiolite colli-
sional orogen, and a Cretaceous-Cenozoic
fore-
land fold and thrust belt with substantial
late
Cenozoic activity that could be a continuation
of
the collisional
orogenesis
of
subcontinental
subduction (cordilleran-type
or a manifestation
orog-
1983)
arc-trench system (Edelman and
and blueschists et al., 1980)
(Hotz et al., 1977; in the Nevadan
belt
require ocean basin closure. Probable accreted arcs include Klamath
the
Rattlesnake
Mountains
Creek
(Irwin,
and parts of the Foothills
terrane
1972;
in
Gray,
the
1986)
terrane in the Sierra
Nevada (200 Ma belt of Saleeby, 1982; Tuolumne River and Slate Creek terranes press).
These
terranes
represent
of Edelman, Early
in
Jurassic
eny) or both.
volcanic-plutonic ensimatic arcs and ophiolites that accreted before the Late Jurassic. Previous
Western United States
suggestions
of Late
Jurassic
collision
(Moores,
1970, 1972; Schweickert and Cowan, 1975; Gastil The late Mesozoic orogen of the western United States consists of, from east (continental side) to west (Fig. 3b): a Late Jurassic-early Tertiary foreland fold and thrust belt (Sevier foreland and Laramide belts), an Early Cretaceous metamorphic core zone characterized by penetrative deformation and both medium P/T Barrovian facies series and low P/T facies series (Sevier hinterland), and a complex zone of Jurassic ophiolites
et al., 1978; Ingersoll and Schweickert, 1986; Edelman, 1987) have been ruled out based on terrane linkage criteria (Mortimer, 1985; Sharp, 1988; Edelman, 1991, this volume). The geometries and chronologies of the remainder of the late Mesozoic erogenic features are compatible with a Nevadan collisional model (Fig. 3b). The Sevier hinterland contains Barrovian metamorphic overprints and other evidence of late Mesozoic crustal thickening
and ensimatic arcs (Nevadan orogen). Middle Jurassic-Cretaceous igneous rocks including the
(Coney and Harms, 1984). The large-scale
Sierra Nevada batholith
depicted in Fig. 2d. In addition, the coeval Canadian Cordillera, which contains extensive late
are widespread and are
associated with a belt of Late Jurassic-Early tiary subduction
melanges, blueschists,
Ter-
and eclo-
gite blocks (Franciscan Complex). These features have been attributed to cordilleran-type orogenesis in the late Mesozoic, with many analogies made to the Cenozoic Andes (Hamilton, 1969a,b, 1985; Coney, 1972, 1973a,b; many others). The Sierra Nevada batholith and associated rocks would represent the marginal arc and the Franciscan Complex would represent the subduction complex. These paired belts, hereafter called the “Sierra-Franciscan arc-trench system,” would represent the subcontinental subduction that caused Nevadan-Sevier-Laramide deformation by subduction hangingwall processes. However, the late Mesozoic erogenic features in the western United States may also be explained by arc-continent collision in the Nevadan belt, followed by contraction of the continental margin in the Sevier and Laramide belts (Fig. 3b)
struc-
ture and cross-cutting relations are similar to those
Mesozoic batholithic complexes, is now widely interpreted as collisional (Tempelman-Kluit, 1979; Brown and Read, 1983; Price, 1986; Lambert and Chamberlain, 1988). Taconic orogeny Dewey and Bird (1970) interpreted reported “gravity slides” in the Taconic allochthons in the northern
Appalachians
as evidence
for cordil-
leran-type orogenesis. Later data argued strongly against both interpretations, the Taconic orogeny being subsequently interpreted as arc (Rowley and Kidd, 1981; Stanley and Ratcliffe, 1985) and ophiolite (Nelson and Casey, 1979; Williams, 1985) collisions. In the central and southern Appalachians, widespread Barrovian metamorphism and coeval deformation are chiefly Taco& (Ordovician; But-
TECTONIC
PROCESSES
AT CONTINENTAL
MARGIN
207
OROGENS
ler, 1972; Glover et al., 1983). The Taconic orog-
earlier
eny in the southern Appalachians
another change in plate motions occurs.
buted to arc-continent Lash,
1982;
Hatcher,
has been attri-
collision (Shamugan 1987)
arc collisions,
may operate
stably
until
and
Marginal basins may be underlain by trapped
whereas no cordil-
oceanic lithosphere as described above and/or by
leran-type models have been proposed.
new
oceanic
spreading.
lithosphere
formed
The mechanisms
by
back-arc
by which marginal
Synthesis and problems
basins close is an important unresolved problem.
Synthesis
Wright, 1984) orogens. Thrust faults must cut the back-arc lithosphere resulting in continentward
This process has been cited in the Andean (Dalziel and Palmer,
The above discussion suggests a simple view of orogenesis in which continents, as passive riders in plate tectonics, are periodically deformed at their margins when they enter subduction zones. When the subduction zones are themselves at continental margins (Andean-style
margins), a continent-con-
tinent collision results. When the subduction zones are intra-oceanic, an arc-continent collision results and subduction reverses to create a convergent
Andean-style
margin
with
a continental
margin orogen. This simple view is predicted by plate theory and is supported by the geologic record. However, problems of marginal basin closure, the long time scales of continental margin orogens in the westem Americas, and deep lithospheric displacement compatibility remain unresolved. Closure of marginal
(Dalziel
1979)
and Nevadan
and Palmer, 1979;
(Harper
and
Nelson et al., 1980;
Bourgois et al., 1982) or oceanward (Harper and Wright, 1984) ophiolite emplacement, but whether these thrust faults are bona fide subduction zones, and the circumstances
under which they might
lead to strong deformation
of the adjacent
con-
tinental margin, are uncertain. This problem hinges in part on whether marginal basin closure is a spontaneous
subduction
hangingwall
contraction
or the result of a buoyant mass entering the subduction zone to cause subduction reversal behind the arc.
Time scales of continental low subduction
margin orogens and shal-
Late Cenozoic deformation in the Andes and Late Cretaceous-early Tertiary deformation of the western United States (Laramide orogeny) are re-
basins
Intra-oceanic subduction zones that dip away from continents are inherently unstable features
stricted to the external parts of the orogens and occurred about 100 million years after the youn-
because they can operate only until the continent enters the subduction zone. When a system of
gest collisions. Although both examples are spatial and temporal continuations of probable collisional
subduction zones initiates in an intra-oceanic
orogenies, the time scales are longer than in better
vironment
en-
during a global or regional plate re-
organization, those subduction zones that face a continent will be preferentially choked while those
known collisions. be associated
Both deformational
events may
with shallowly dipping subduction
that face open ocean continue to operate in a quasi-steady state. The choked subduction zones may cause collisional orogenesis and subduction
as indicated by continentward migration of magmatism in the western United States and the present dips of Benioff zones beneath western South America (Coney and Reynolds, 1977; Al-
reversal, whereas the oceanward-facing subduction zones may form a system of fringing island arcs separated from the continent by marginal basins. The resulting configuration of oceanward facing oceanic arcs and/or continental margin arcs, the latter being built into basement deformed by the
lmendinger et al., 1983; Jordan et al., 1983; Bird, 1988). During shallow subduction, the entire continental margin is a relatively thin thrust sheet and may be subject to lithosphere-scale fault-bend folding, duplex folding, backthrusting, and outof-sequence forethrusting.
208
S.H. EDELMAN
In addition,
the thickeness
of the “erogenic
walls. This deformation
may result from arc- and
wedge” (Davis et al., 1983; Platt, 1986; Jamieson
ophiolite-continent
and Beaumont, 1988) may increase by addition of
versal and/or
processes
magma and thus drive orogenesis.
subcontinental
subduction.
This process
would be an updated version of the “magmatic welt” (Dewey and Bird, 1970;
Hamilton,
1985).
tion is a predictable
collisions
and subduction
resulting
directly
Collisional
consequence
re-
from
deforma-
of subduction;
imbrication and thickening of continental
margins
However, this process must be treated with cau-
when they enter subduction zones is a kinematic
tion becuase, despite the impressive dimensions of
continuation
the granitic-dacitic
oceanic sediments in accretionary
batholiths and volcanic fields
of the imbrication
and thickening of prisms. In con-
of the western Americas, these materials are prob-
trast, cordilleran-type
ably transferred from lower to higher crustal levels
diction of plate theory nor an attribute
with only mafic material being added to the wedge
modem
convergent
orogenesis is neither a premargins.
maintains
is the
from beneath the crust.
only modem
Displacement
hangingwall orogen, and there are no demonstrably noncollisional orogens.
compatibility
arc that
of most
The Andes
a subduction
The outstanding kinematic problem with continental margin orogens is how the finite, oppositely-verging ,displacement fields of the coeval
The late Cenozoic Andean orogeny and the Late Cretaceous-early Tertiary Laramide orogeny occurred 100 m.y. after the youngest possible collisions. These deformations are restricted to fore-
oceanic subduction and the continental subduction (continent-directed thrust faulting, Bally,
scales, are space-time
1981)
orogenies. Alternatively,
interact
at
depth.
whether cordilleran-type
This (Fig.
problem
arises
2b) or collisional
land regions and, notwithstanding
the long time of collisional
these extended deforma-
tional events and other components of continental
(Fig. 2d) processes are ultimately operative. If the
margin deformation
down-dip continuations
deformation
of the thrust faults in Fig.
continuations
may be due to hangingwall
during
shallow
subduction.
The
2b,d had been drawn, a displacement compatibility problem would become obvious. In both the Laramide and Andean orogenies, the oceanwarddirected thrust systems accommodated shortening one or two orders of magnitude greater than that of the continent-directed systems.
primary kinematic problem with continental margin orogens is how displacements on the oppositely directed subduction and foreland thrust belts interact at depth. Resolution of this problem is critical to elucidating tectonic processes at continental margin orogens.
If orogenesis is accompanied by no crustal contraction as implied by Dewey and Bird’s (1970)
Acknowledgments
cordilleran-type orogen (Fig. Id) and suggested explicitely by Hamilton (1985), no displacement compatibility problem arises. If there is contraction (Allmendinger et al., 1983; Roeder, 1988) then continental thrust faults may terminate against the coeval subduction zone to form backthrusts and tectonic wedges (Price, 1986). Determination of this deep structure may be critical to understanding erogenic processes at continental margins. Conclusions Continental margin orogens appear to represent crustal contraction in subduction hanging-
I thank Eldridge M. Moores Beard for stimulating discussions,
and James S. and a Univer-
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