The Pelona, Orocopia, and Rand Schists and the schists of Portal Ridge and Sierra de Salinas constitute a high-pressure/temperature terrane that was accreted beneath North American basement in Late Cretaceous-earliest Tertiary time. The schists crop out in a belt extending from the southern Coast Ranges through the Mojave Desert, central Transverse Ranges, southeastern California, and southwestern Arizona. Ion microprobe U-Pb results from 850 detrital zircons from 40 metagraywackes demonstrates a Late Cretaceous to earliest Tertiary depositional age for the sedimentary part of the schist's protolith. About 40% of the 206 Pb/ 238 U spot ages are Late Cretaceous. The youngest detrital zircon ages and post-metamorphic mica 40 Ar/ 39 Ar cooling ages bracket when the schist's graywacke protolith was eroded from its source region, deposited, underthrust, accreted, and metamorphosed. This interval averages 13 ± 10 m.y. but locally is too short (<~3 m.y.) to be resolved with our meth-
ods. The timing of accretion decreases systematically (in palinspastically restored coordinates) from about 91 ± 1 Ma in the southwesternmost Sierra Nevada (San Emigdio Mountains) to 48 ± 5 Ma in southwest Arizona (Neversweat Ridge). Our results indicate two distinct source regions: (1) The Rand Schist and schists of Portal Ridge and Sierra de Salinas were derived from material eroded from Early to early Late Cretaceous basement (like the Sierra Nevada batholith); and (2) The OrocopiaSchist was derived from a heterogeneous assemblage of Proterozoic, Triassic, Jurassic, and latest Cretaceous to earliest Tertiary crystalline rocks (such as basement in the Mojave/Transverse Ranges/southwest Arizona/northern Sonora). The Pelona Schist is transitional between the two.
U-Pb isotopic dating of detrital zircon from supracrustal Proterozoic and Cambrian arenites from the western UnitedStates and northern Mexico reveal three main age groups, 1.90 to 1.62 Ga, 1.45 to 1.40 Ga, and 1.2 to 1.0 Ga. Small amounts of zircons with ages of 3.1 to 2.5
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.