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Cretaceous ocean formation in the High Arctic.

Authors :
Døssing, Arne
Gaina, Carmen
Jackson, H. Ruth
Andersen, Ole Baltazar
Source :
Earth & Planetary Science Letters. Dec2020, Vol. 551, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

• Gravity-derived basement topography constraint on the Canada Basin spreading system. • Consistent oblique ridge sub-segmentation along northeast-trending non-transforms. • Highly oblique sea-floor spreading in the Canada Basin during the Early Cretaceous. • Termination of seafloor spreading during a geomagnetic reverse polarity chron. • Juxtaposition of Chuckchi Borderland and Sever Spur prior to ocean crust formation. Understanding the evolution of ocean basins is critical for studies in global plate tectonics, mantle dynamics, and sea-level through time, and relies on identifiable tectonic plate boundaries. The evolution of the 2.5 million km2 Amerasia Basin in the Arctic Ocean remains largely unsettled due to widespread overprint by the Cretaceous High-Arctic Large Igneous Province. Traces of an extinct, but deeply buried, spreading centre (herein South Amerasia Ridge, SAR) has been shown to exist in the southern part of the Amerasia Basin, in the Canada Basin. However, structural details of the SAR and, hence, the kinematic evolution of the Canada Basin, are yet to be unraveled. Based on 3D gravity inversion and the vertical gravity gradient of the latest generation of satellite gravity models, we document new structures within the Canada Basin spreading system. Our results are supported by analysis of aeromagnetic and recent marine geophysical data. Evidence is shown of consistent oblique segmentation of the SAR spreading centre in a right stepping en echelon pattern. The spreading segments are offset by northeast-trending non-transforms that are traceable throughout the oceanic crustal domain and parallel to pre-oceanic strike-slip faults in the older part of the Canada Basin. We interpret the SAR to have formed by highly oblique spreading in a northeast-southwest direction. We compare the predicted SAR basement topography with the global ridge systems and produce a detailed magnetic modelling also constrained by the basement topography. The results indicate that the SAR crust formed by a slow-to-intermediate spreading regime and that sea-floor spreading terminated during a reverse polarity chron, most likely in the Early Cretaceous. Our novel plate reconstruction model, adopting a highly oblique spreading in Canada Basin, requires a translational motion of the Alaska/Chukotka tectonic block, replacing the decades-old rotational model of the Cretaceous High Arctic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0012821X
Volume :
551
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Earth & Planetary Science Letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146169338
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2020.116552