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Escape tectonics and the extrusion of Alaska: Past, present, and future

January 1, 2007

The North Pacific Rim is a tectonically active plate boundary zone parts of which may be characterized as a laterally moving orogenic stream. Crustal blocks are transported along large-magnitude strike-slip faults in western Canada and central Alaska toward the Aleutian-Bering Sea subduction zones. Throughout much of the Cenozoic, at and west of its Alaskan nexus, the North Pacific Rim orogenic Stream (NPRS) has undergone tectonic escape. During transport, relatively rigid blocks acquired paleomagnetic rotations and fault-juxtaposed boundaries while flowing differentially through the system, from their original point of accretion and entrainment toward the free face defined by the Aleutian-Bering Sea subduction zones. Built upon classical terrane tectonics, the NPRS model provides a new framework with which to view the mobilistic nature of the western North American plate boundary zone. ?? 2007 The Geological Society of America.

Publication Year 2007
Title Escape tectonics and the extrusion of Alaska: Past, present, and future
DOI 10.1130/G23799A.1
Authors T.F. Redfield, D.W. Scholl, P.G. Fitzgerald, M. E. Beck
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geology
Index ID 70031287
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
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