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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
1Manuscript received November 7, 1996; revised manuscript
received July 1, 1997; final acceptance July 11, 1997.
2Geological Survey of Canada, 3303 - 33rd Street NW, Calgary,
Alberta, T2L 2A7, Canada.
Arlee Flood and Peter Neelands prepared the digital figures. D. G.
Cook, C. L. Hanks, G. B. Newton, P. G. Johnson, and L. D. Currie kindly
reviewed the manuscript. Geological Survey of Canada Contribution Number
1996349.
ABSTRACT
The Beaufort Sea region is 1000 km from the nearest plate margin. Northward
shortening across Arctic Alaska and the northern Canadian cordillera reflects
the convergent component of Kula (later, Pacific)-North America interactions
throughout the Tertiary. North- to northeast-trending structures of latest
Cretaceous to early Tertiary age in northern Yukon and east-central Alaska
accommodate shortening of 180-240 km, and reflect Eurasia-North America
convergence. The strongly arcuate offshore Beaufort fold belt and similar
structures in adjacent northernmost Yukon and northeast Alaska were formed
by the complex interplay of three factors: shortening of northern Yukon
between Arctic Alaska and the craton to produce a north-trending orogenic
welt; northward displacements propagated from the Kula plate margin; and
local boundary conditions imposed by lithology and crustal structure, which
aided lateral escape of the deforming supracrustal succession northward
into the Beaufort Sea.
In central Alaska, any kinematic linkage between the Kaltag fault in
the west and the Tintina fault of the northern cordillera is more complex
than was previously assumed. A new regional tectonic reconstruction of
northern Yukon-Alaska quantifies the tectonic shortening in central Alaska
south of the Kaltag and Tintina faults in an area where tectonic shortening
is difficult to quantify due to complex geology. Complex deformation accommodated
by folding, thrust and strike-slip faulting, and/or tectonic rotations
accounts for an estimated 460 km of crustal shortening, approximately equivalent
in magnitude to the total Tintina fault displacement of at least 450 km.
The foreland of the Brooks Range, the Beaufort fold belt, and the northern
cordillera contain proven petroleum basins. This regional synthesis validates
a model of orogenic shortening for the Beaufort fold belt and provides
a unifying tectonic setting for oil and gas plays throughout the region.
The latest Cretaceous-Tertiary structural evolution of the Brooks Range,
Beaufort, and northern Yukon fold belts is a case study of the temporally
and kinematically complex far-field deformation arising from the convergence
of four major tectonic plates.
Regional crustal shortening in northern Yukon and northeastern Alaska
occurred episodically from the latest Cretaceous to the late Miocene, with
a major culmination occurring in the Paleocene to middle Eocene, and a
secondary culmination in the late Miocene. Structural trends are predominantly
north to northeastward in northern Yukon and adjacent east-central Alaska,
and generally east-west along the Brooks Range. The early Tertiary trend
is strongly arcuate in the Beaufort fold belt and adjacent onshore areas.
The continuity of structures southward from the Beaufort Sea region through
northern Yukon and east-central Alaska supports the interpretation that
the structures north of 65°N form a single orogenic entity.
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