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Abstract
Geochronology, Geochemistry, and Tectonic Setting of the Mesozoic Nazas Arc in North-Central Mexico, and its Continuation to Northern South America
Claudio Bartolini,1 Harold Lang,2 Terry Spell3
1International Geological Consultant, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.
2Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, U.S.A.
3Department of Geoscience, University of Nevada at Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.A.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Claudio Bartolini is indebted to graduate advisor Kathy Marsaglia for bringing him to the University of Texas at El Paso, suggesting his dissertation research topic, and for supporting his funding efforts. We are grateful to Nancy McMillan and Roger Denison for a constructive review of the manuscript and for understanding the limitations of our geochemical and geochronological data sets, which ultimately are the only data that these rocks yield. This regional study only was possible thanks to the support received from Exxon Exploration Company, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and Servicios de Exploracin Peoles. Claudio Bartolini was lucky to have met don Domingo Juarez, the best guide in the northern Zacatecas region. Don Domingo accompanied Claudio during eight months of field work in this region, and Claudio stayed at his home in Caopas, Zacatecas, thereby having the opportunity to live with this wonderful Mexican family. Claudio is grateful to don Refugio Zamora, a prospector in central Mexico, who guided him through the states of Coahuila, Zacatecas, and San Luis Potos for several months. Domingo and Refugio became Claudio's new friends. Claudio also thanks Alberto and Sergio of Linares, Tamaulipas, for providing guidance and transportation to reach the outcrops in Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas states.
This paper is dedicated to Paul Damon and Roger Denison, for their pioneer studies on the geochronology, geochemistry, and tectonic setting of Mesozoic and Cenozoic magmatic arcs of the Mexican Republic, and to Robert Mixon and Jose Carrillo-Bravo for establishing the geologic foundations for Mesozoic red bed strata in central and northeastern Mexico.
ABSTRACT
Volcanic, sedimentary, and granitic plutonic rocks that are part of the early Mesozoic Cordilleran continental magmatic arc are exposed in a belt from the southwestern United States to Guatemala. In the Mexican states of Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango, Zacatecas, and San Luis Potos, these rocks form a discontinuous southeast-trending belt across north-central Mexico. Whole-rock geochemical analyses of volcanic and intrusive rocks in north-central Mexico indicate a calc-alkaline suite formed in this continental volcanic arc along the convergent margin of western North America. Paleomagnetism, field relations, and isotopic ages (40Ar/39Ar, K-Ar, Rb-Sr, and U-Pb) of 73 volcanic and intrusive rocks document the Late Triassic–Middle Jurassic age of the arc. In the region, isotopic ages commonly are reset, apparently because of thermotectonic events during the Laramide orogeny that led to the development of the Sierra Madre Oriental fold and thrust belt and to deep burial of the arc rocks. Available evidence suggests that the arc underwent two main phases of subsidence. One phase of extensional subsidence created intra-arc basins and a peak of volcanism throughout the arc in the Early–Middle Jurassic. A second phase began in the Oxfordian, with subsidence and initial deposition of the Zuloaga and La Gloria Formations. Continued sedimentation during this phase led to accumulation of 5–7 km of strata above the arc, as Cretaceous seas transgressed westward over inland Mexico.
The similarities in age, depositional environment, clastic composition, magma types, and geochemical affinity and, more importantly, the tectonic settings that gave rise to the Nazas Formation in Mexico and La Quinta and Girn Formations in Venezuela and Colombia suggest that these two volcanic-sedimentary sequences, now hundred of kilometers apart, were once part of the Late Triassic–Jurassic continental magmatic arc. This arc extended from Alaska to South America and evolved during simultaneous subduction along the western margin of Pangea, rifting in the Caribbean–Gulf of Mexico region, and associated large-scale transpressive activity.
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