The New York promontory serves as the divide between the northern and southern segments of the Appalachian orogen. Antiquated subdivisions, distinct for each segment, implied that they had lithotectonic histories that were independent of each other. Using new lithotectonic subdivisions we compare first order features of the pre-Silurian orogenic 'building blocks' in order to test the validity of the implication of independent lithotectonic histories for the two segments.Three lithotectonic divisions, termed here the Laurentian, Iapetan, and the peri-Gondwanan realms, characterize the entire orogen. The Laurentian realm, composed of native North American rocks, is remarkably uniform for the length of the orogen. It records the multistage Neoproterozoic-early Paleozoic rift-drift history of the Appalachian passive margin, formation of a Taconic Seaway, and the ultimate demise of both in the Middle Ordovician. The Iapetan realm encompasses mainly oceanic and magmatic arc tracts that once lay within the Iapetus Ocean, between Laurentia and Gondwana. In the northern segment, the realm is divisible on the basis of stratigraphy and faunal provinciality into peri-Laurentian and peri-Gondwanan tracts that were amalgamated in the Late Ordovician. South of New York, stratigraphic and faunal controls decrease markedly; rock associations are not inconsistent with those of the northern Appalachians, although second-order differences exist. Exposed exotic crustal blocks of the peri-Gondwanan realm include Ganderia, Avalonia, and Meguma in the north, and Carolinia in the south. Carolinia most closely resembles Ganderia, both in early evolution and Late Ordovician-Silurian docking to Laurentia.Our comparison indicates that, to a first order, the pre-Silurian Appalachian orogen developed uniformly, starting with complex rifting and a subsequent drift phase to form the Appalachian margin, followed by the consolidation of Iapetan components and ending with accretion of the peri-Gonwanan Ganderia and Carolinia. This deduction implies that any first-order differences between northern and southern segments post-date Late Ordovician consolidation of a large portion of the orogen. introductionThe Appalachian orogen (fig. 1) is the northeast-trending belt of Mesoproterozoic to Paleozoic rocks in eastern North America that was deformed during the Paleozoic (Rodgers, 1970). The structural grain of the orogen is remarkably consistent, defining a series of broad, harmonically curved promontories and embayments (fig. 1). These structural bends have been used to delineate segments of the orogen termed the southern (Alabama promontory-Virginia promontory), central (or middle, Virginia promontory-New York promontory), northern (New York promontory-St. Lawrence promontory), and Newfoundland Appalachians (north of St. Lawrence promontory) (Rodgers, 1949(Rodgers, , 1970 (fig. 1); however, commonly in modern parlance, the New York promontory, located near the center and at the narrowest part of the orogen, serves as the divide between two segments r...
Subduction of a spreading ridge is expected to leave a geological signature upon the overriding accretionary prism distinct from that of conventional convergent plate boundaries. The late Oligocene‐early Miocene rocks of the Shimanto accretionary prism at Cape Muroto, Shikoku Island, record a tectonomagmatic fabric that is anomalous with respect to typical accretionary prisms. These accreted strata have been imprinted with an unusual late stage event that involved (1) regional cusp‐like flexing of structural trends in the prism, (2) near‐trench magmatism, and (3) pervasive faulting. This event overlaps in time with the opening of the Shikoku back arc basin (circa 26–14 Ma); the Shikoku basin spreading ridge trends perpendicular to the strike of the accretionary prism and is now located immediately offshore of Cape Muroto. The regional flexing of structural trends in the prism affects rocks as old as Cretaceous, although the flexure is most tightly developed in the late Oligocene‐early Miocene portion of the prism, where it is steeply plunging. Kinematic analysis of the flexure and the pervasive fault system indicates that the flexure most likely resulted from indentation of the prism by a rigid feature. At Cape Muroto the core of the flexure forms a locus for mafic dikes that are petrochemically equivalent to some mid‐ocean ridge basalts (MORB) from the Shikoku back arc basin. Preliminary paleomagnetic data suggest that the dikes were intruded during the later stages of flexure development. These data, combined with plate reconstructions for the area at 15 Ma, indicate that indentation of the prism most likely resulted from early Miocene orthogonal subduction of the topographically elevated Shikoku Basin spreading ridge in the Muroto area; MORB magmatic rocks in the core of the flexure appear to have emanated from the active spreading ridge during subduction.
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