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U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Late Cretaceous Tectonic Evolution and Metallogeny of Southwestern Alaska
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M arti L. Miller 1 Dwight C. Bradley 1 Thomas K. Bundtzen 2 Richard J. Goldfarb 3 1 U.S. Geological Survey, Anchorage 2 Pacific Rim Geological Consulting 3 U.S. Geological Survey, Denver
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Tectonic setting of the Kuskokwim Mineral Belt Lies within a broad zone of dextral strike-slip faults Occupies a backarc position ~400 km inboard of the present subduction zone Occurs at the western end of a curved, continental- scale, strike-slip system
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Southwestern Alaska— tectonostratigraphic terranes After Decker and others, 1984
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Geology--central Kuskokwim Mineral Belt Kuskokwim Group
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Geology--central Kuskokwim Mineral Belt Volcanic-plutonic complex Felsic porphyritic dike
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Deposits of the central Kuskokwim Mineral Belt Epizonal Hg-Sb and Au Precious metal- bearing intrusion related
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Shotgun Mineralized qtz-feldspar porphyry Kuskokwim Group 70 Ma qtz-feldspar porphyry Veins, breccias, stockworks Au, As, B ± Cu, Mo, Bi, Te Granodiorite stock
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Epizonal Hg-Sb deposits Red Devil Cinnabar Creek
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Epizonal Au-bearing deposits Donlin
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Iditarod-Nixon Fork fault—at least 90 km dextral offset Denali fault—at least 134 km dextral offset
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Along strike-slip faults: Fortyseven Creek Nixon Fork Dike-bearing ridge west of Fortyseven Cr
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Between master faults: Donlin Red Devil
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Dextral strike-slip motion was taking place at the time of ~70 Ma deposit formation Faults focused the fluids and accompanying mineralization Some of the deposits are spatially associated with the master faults and others lie between these faults What we know
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Why was there voluminous ~70 Ma magmatism over a wide area? Why was the regional thermal gradient elevated across a broad region? Why are both mantle- and flysch-derived intrusive rocks present? What got the fluids and melts moving? Are mineralization and magmatism both products of the same tectonic event? What changed in the tectonic regime at ~70 Ma? What we don’t know
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Present: Dextral motion related to tectonic escape in collisional foreland, despite local sinistral sense of oblique subduction Escape
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~55 Ma: Dextral motion was possibly accentuated by “megakinking” during oroclinal bending Plate ?
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At ~60 Ma three possibilities for identity of subducting plate --Resurrection Plate preferred Engebretsen et al., 1985 Bradley et al., 1993 Preferred: Miller et al.,2002 Haeussler et al., 2003
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~70 Ma: Dextral motion driven by oblique convergence prior to ridge subduction
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A witches brew: Curved margin Oblique subduction Escape to free face
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Low angle subductionSlab break off Ridge subductionEscape tectonics Possible tectonic scenarios
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References cited Bradley, D.C., Haeussler, P.J., and Kusky, T.M., 1993, Timing of early Tertiary ridge subduction in southern Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 2068, p. 163-177. Decker, J., Bergman, S.C., Blodgett, R.B., Box, S.E., Bundtzen, T.K., et al., 1994, The geology of southwestern Alaska, in Plafker, G., and Berg, H.C., eds., The geology of Alaska: Geological Society of America DNAG Series, v. G-1, p. 285-310. Ebert, S., Miller, L., Petsel, S., Dodd, S., and Kowalczyk, 2000, Geology, mineralization, and exploration at the Donlin Creek project, southwestern Alaska: British Columbia and Yukon Chamber of Mines Special Volume 2, p. 99-114. Engebretsen, D.C., Cox, Allan, and Gordon, R.G., 1985, Relative motions between oceanic and continental plates in the Pacific Basin: Geological Society of America Special Paper 206, 59 p. Haeussler, P.J., Bradley, D.C., Wells, R.E., and Miller, M.L., 2003, Life and death of the Resurrection plate: Evidence for its existence and subduction in the northeastern Pacific in Paleocene-Eocene time: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 115, p. 867-880. Miller, M.L., Bradley, D.C., Bundtzen, T.K., and McClelland, W., 2002, Late Cretaceous through Cenozoic strike-slip tectonics of southwestern Alaska: Journal of Geology, v. 110, p. 247-270.
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