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The Cordilleran Miogeosyncline in North America

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The Cordilleran Miogeosyncline in North America Synopsis

Steep crustal-scale faults, having their origins in the Late Archean and Early Proterozoic and trending NE-SW, which define the fundamental block lithospheric structure of the North American craton, are seen from geological and geophysical evidence to continue far into the interior of the Late Proterozoic-Phanerozoic Canadian Cordilleran mobile megabelt. This suggests that variously reworked ex-cratonic basement blocks underlie much of the Cordillera. The western edge of the modern craton is probably near the Rocky Mountain-Omineca belt boundary; the Rocky Mountain fold-and-thrust belt on the east side of the Cordillera is evidently rootless and overlies the undisturbed cratonic basement. Phanerozoic differences between the Cordilleran tectonic belts, resulting from a long, dissimilar, multi-cycle history of waxing and waning orogenesis apparent from the rock record, lie chiefly in the degree of indigenous tectonic remobilization and reworking of the ancient crust.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9783540661979
Publication date:
Author: Henry V Lyatsky, Vadim B Lyatsky
Publisher: Springer an imprint of Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 384 pages
Series: Lecture Notes in Earth Sciences
Genres: Geology, geomorphology and the lithosphere
Sedimentology and pedology
Geophysics