Exhuming an Accretionary Prism: A Case Study of the Kodiak Accretionary Complex, Alaska, USA

We have carried a structural study across Kodiak accretionary complex in Alaska, USA, in order to describe its thermal structure and decipher the processes of exhumation. The accretionary complex consists of a stack of tectonic mélanges and coherent units. Mélanges are characterized by simple shear...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tectonics (Washington, D.C.) D.C.), 2023-10, Vol.42 (10)
Hauptverfasser: Rajič, Kristijan, Raimbourg, Hugues, Famin, Vincent, Moris‐Muttoni, Benjamin, Fisher, Donald M., Morell, Kristin D., Canizarés, Aurélien
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container_title Tectonics (Washington, D.C.)
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creator Rajič, Kristijan
Raimbourg, Hugues
Famin, Vincent
Moris‐Muttoni, Benjamin
Fisher, Donald M.
Morell, Kristin D.
Canizarés, Aurélien
description We have carried a structural study across Kodiak accretionary complex in Alaska, USA, in order to describe its thermal structure and decipher the processes of exhumation. The accretionary complex consists of a stack of tectonic mélanges and coherent units. Mélanges are characterized by simple shear deformation with a pervasive network of top‐to‐the‐trench shear zones, whereas coherent units are affected principally by horizontal shortening, except for spatially limited outcrops in Kodiak Central Belt. Peak temperatures estimated using Raman spectroscopy of carbonaceous material range from 220 to 400°C through most of the complex. These temperatures coincide with estimates from metamorphic parageneses and are interpreted as temperatures of deformation achieved under a high gradient due to contemporaneous ridge subduction. The highest temperatures are recorded in the central part of the complex, pointing to a dome‐like structure. Lower temperatures (∼120°C) are recorded along the southeastern border of the complex, in slope sediments unconformably overlying accreted units. Based on the combination of structural and thermal data, we conclude that the rocks constituting the Kodiak complex experienced at least two stages of burial and then exhumation, with vertical motions reaching up to ∼13 km from the Paleocene to the present. Given the pervasive horizontal shortening within the wedge, exhumation resulted from prism thickening contemporaneous with surficial erosion. Recorded subsidence episodes may be local phenomena associated with thrusting or large‐scale processes associated with basal erosion. The rates of vertical motion range from 0.2 to 1.3 mm/yr, comparable with estimates in modern margins. In this study, we examined several units from the Kodiak accretionary complex, an archetypal example of the accretionary wedge in southern Alaska, to improve our understanding of the processes that influence convergent margins. These units were subducted to significant depths, but the mechanisms responsible for their exhumation back to the surface remain unclear. Estimated peak‐burial temperatures in basally accreted units across the complex are in the range 220–400°C, with a temperature gap between basally accreted units and slope sediments (100–140°C). Temperatures and pressures suggest a burial down to depths of ∼7–13 km. Based on deformation kinematics and temperature estimates in basally accreted units and slope sediments, we propose that the exhumation period
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The accretionary complex consists of a stack of tectonic mélanges and coherent units. Mélanges are characterized by simple shear deformation with a pervasive network of top‐to‐the‐trench shear zones, whereas coherent units are affected principally by horizontal shortening, except for spatially limited outcrops in Kodiak Central Belt. Peak temperatures estimated using Raman spectroscopy of carbonaceous material range from 220 to 400°C through most of the complex. These temperatures coincide with estimates from metamorphic parageneses and are interpreted as temperatures of deformation achieved under a high gradient due to contemporaneous ridge subduction. The highest temperatures are recorded in the central part of the complex, pointing to a dome‐like structure. Lower temperatures (∼120°C) are recorded along the southeastern border of the complex, in slope sediments unconformably overlying accreted units. Based on the combination of structural and thermal data, we conclude that the rocks constituting the Kodiak complex experienced at least two stages of burial and then exhumation, with vertical motions reaching up to ∼13 km from the Paleocene to the present. Given the pervasive horizontal shortening within the wedge, exhumation resulted from prism thickening contemporaneous with surficial erosion. Recorded subsidence episodes may be local phenomena associated with thrusting or large‐scale processes associated with basal erosion. The rates of vertical motion range from 0.2 to 1.3 mm/yr, comparable with estimates in modern margins. In this study, we examined several units from the Kodiak accretionary complex, an archetypal example of the accretionary wedge in southern Alaska, to improve our understanding of the processes that influence convergent margins. These units were subducted to significant depths, but the mechanisms responsible for their exhumation back to the surface remain unclear. Estimated peak‐burial temperatures in basally accreted units across the complex are in the range 220–400°C, with a temperature gap between basally accreted units and slope sediments (100–140°C). Temperatures and pressures suggest a burial down to depths of ∼7–13 km. Based on deformation kinematics and temperature estimates in basally accreted units and slope sediments, we propose that the exhumation periods result from basal accretion, horizontal shortening, and surficial erosion. In contrast, subsidence most likely resulted from thrusting in the upper plate or basal erosion. 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The accretionary complex consists of a stack of tectonic mélanges and coherent units. Mélanges are characterized by simple shear deformation with a pervasive network of top‐to‐the‐trench shear zones, whereas coherent units are affected principally by horizontal shortening, except for spatially limited outcrops in Kodiak Central Belt. Peak temperatures estimated using Raman spectroscopy of carbonaceous material range from 220 to 400°C through most of the complex. These temperatures coincide with estimates from metamorphic parageneses and are interpreted as temperatures of deformation achieved under a high gradient due to contemporaneous ridge subduction. The highest temperatures are recorded in the central part of the complex, pointing to a dome‐like structure. Lower temperatures (∼120°C) are recorded along the southeastern border of the complex, in slope sediments unconformably overlying accreted units. Based on the combination of structural and thermal data, we conclude that the rocks constituting the Kodiak complex experienced at least two stages of burial and then exhumation, with vertical motions reaching up to ∼13 km from the Paleocene to the present. Given the pervasive horizontal shortening within the wedge, exhumation resulted from prism thickening contemporaneous with surficial erosion. Recorded subsidence episodes may be local phenomena associated with thrusting or large‐scale processes associated with basal erosion. The rates of vertical motion range from 0.2 to 1.3 mm/yr, comparable with estimates in modern margins. In this study, we examined several units from the Kodiak accretionary complex, an archetypal example of the accretionary wedge in southern Alaska, to improve our understanding of the processes that influence convergent margins. These units were subducted to significant depths, but the mechanisms responsible for their exhumation back to the surface remain unclear. Estimated peak‐burial temperatures in basally accreted units across the complex are in the range 220–400°C, with a temperature gap between basally accreted units and slope sediments (100–140°C). Temperatures and pressures suggest a burial down to depths of ∼7–13 km. Based on deformation kinematics and temperature estimates in basally accreted units and slope sediments, we propose that the exhumation periods result from basal accretion, horizontal shortening, and surficial erosion. In contrast, subsidence most likely resulted from thrusting in the upper plate or basal erosion. 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The accretionary complex consists of a stack of tectonic mélanges and coherent units. Mélanges are characterized by simple shear deformation with a pervasive network of top‐to‐the‐trench shear zones, whereas coherent units are affected principally by horizontal shortening, except for spatially limited outcrops in Kodiak Central Belt. Peak temperatures estimated using Raman spectroscopy of carbonaceous material range from 220 to 400°C through most of the complex. These temperatures coincide with estimates from metamorphic parageneses and are interpreted as temperatures of deformation achieved under a high gradient due to contemporaneous ridge subduction. The highest temperatures are recorded in the central part of the complex, pointing to a dome‐like structure. Lower temperatures (∼120°C) are recorded along the southeastern border of the complex, in slope sediments unconformably overlying accreted units. Based on the combination of structural and thermal data, we conclude that the rocks constituting the Kodiak complex experienced at least two stages of burial and then exhumation, with vertical motions reaching up to ∼13 km from the Paleocene to the present. Given the pervasive horizontal shortening within the wedge, exhumation resulted from prism thickening contemporaneous with surficial erosion. Recorded subsidence episodes may be local phenomena associated with thrusting or large‐scale processes associated with basal erosion. The rates of vertical motion range from 0.2 to 1.3 mm/yr, comparable with estimates in modern margins. In this study, we examined several units from the Kodiak accretionary complex, an archetypal example of the accretionary wedge in southern Alaska, to improve our understanding of the processes that influence convergent margins. These units were subducted to significant depths, but the mechanisms responsible for their exhumation back to the surface remain unclear. Estimated peak‐burial temperatures in basally accreted units across the complex are in the range 220–400°C, with a temperature gap between basally accreted units and slope sediments (100–140°C). Temperatures and pressures suggest a burial down to depths of ∼7–13 km. Based on deformation kinematics and temperature estimates in basally accreted units and slope sediments, we propose that the exhumation periods result from basal accretion, horizontal shortening, and surficial erosion. In contrast, subsidence most likely resulted from thrusting in the upper plate or basal erosion. A maximum temperature of the order of 300–400°C is observed in the central part of the complex, decreasing to ∼220–300°C landward and seaward The accretionary complex experienced two sequences of rock burial and then exhumation since the Paleocene Exhumation at rates of ∼0.2–1.3 mm/yr resulted from uplift associated with surficial erosion</abstract><cop>Washington</cop><pub>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</pub><doi>10.1029/2023TC007754</doi><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7451-5363</orcidid><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2344-3838</orcidid><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9160-0989</orcidid><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6464-4719</orcidid><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8464-3553</orcidid><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2351-3701</orcidid><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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source Wiley-Blackwell Journals; Wiley-Blackwell AGU Digital Archive
subjects Accretion
Active margins
Analytical methods
Deformation
Earth Sciences
Erosion rates
Geological processes
Kinematics
Low temperature
Outcrops
Palaeocene
Paleocene
Sciences of the Universe
Sediment
Sediments
Shear
Slopes
Spectroscopy
Subduction
Subsidence
Thermal structure
Vertical motion
title Exhuming an Accretionary Prism: A Case Study of the Kodiak Accretionary Complex, Alaska, USA
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