Introduction
Tectonic SettingThe United States portion of the long-lived part of the North American continent consists of Precambrian cratons, including Archean cratons such as the Wyoming craton, and the Proterozoic Interior Platform (Bleeker, 2003;Hoffman, 1988). Since cratonic accretion, the Cenozoic-Mesozoic Rocky Mountain Cordillera and Paleozoic Appalachian Mountains formed on the west and east sides of the craton (Figure 1), respectively. Extending further out from the relatively stable core of the continent and to the east of the Appalachian range, the Atlantic Coastal Plain province in the east is a Paleozoic passive plate margin (Bally et al., 1989). The western edge of North America has a more complex tectonic history. Its seismically and tectonically active continental margin, Mesozoic-Cenozoic orogenies, and arc volcanism are controlled by the interaction between oceanic Pacific, Kula and Farallon plates and the North American plate (Atwater, 1989). Currently, the Juan de Fuca plate, a remnant of the Farallon plate, is subducting beneath North America at the Cascadia subduction zone (Atwater, 1970), causing arc volcanism, earthquakes, and episodic tremor and slip (Rogers & Dragert, 2003). The further inland location of the Laramide orogeny and eastward migration of magmatism during the Mesozoic can be explained by the contemporaneous flattening of the Farallon slab, which was likely caused by the increase in subduction rate and slab buoyancy (Engebretson et al., 1984(Engebretson et al., , 1985Molnar & Atwater, 1978). The Tertiary extensional system of the Basin and Range is likely due to the steepening of the Farallon Plate (Coney & Reynolds, 1977;Davis, 1980). Compared to tectonically active western North America, there is minimal tectonic activity and topographic variation in the central and eastern United States. However, variations in crustal and mantle structure do exist and have been the