The Border Ranges fault system forms the most fundamental crustal boundary in southern Alaska, separating crystalline basement with Paleozoic and Mesozoic arc sequences, the Wrangellia terrane, from a long-lived accretionary complex, the Chugach terrane. Although the Border Ranges fault system originated as a subduction zone megathrust, few strands of it preserve that original history. This study shows that a dextral fault zone, herein named the Hanagita fault system, has overprinted the subduction zone megathrust. This dextral fault zone is 5-10 km wide and has been traced continuously for ~250 km. The Hanagita fault system is probably continuous with dextral slip systems described in Glacier Bay and Baranof Island in southeast Alaska, which would extend its length to ~700 km. Within this fault zone, elements of Wrangellia and the Chugach terrane are complexly intermixed.Geologic mapping and 40 Ar/ 39 Ar geochronology of white mica crystallized during dextral slip indicate the strike-slip faulting may have begun by ~85 Ma and was continuous from ~70 Ma until ~51 Ma. Accretion of a thick fl ysch sequence along this margin began in the Maastrichtian (latest Cretaceous) and continued uninterrupted through middle Eocene. Migration of a ridge-trench-trench triple junction along this margin during the late Paleocene-early Eocene introduced hot fl uids to the fault zone and plutons on the southern edge of the fault system. Dextral slip occurred before, during, and after the triple junction migration. Thus, the Hanagita fault system records long-lived oblique convergence between two separate oceanic plates and North America and is a relatively well-preserved example of displacement partitioning along the backstop of an accretionary prism. The Hanagita fault system includes several through-going dextral high-angle faults that are continuous on the scale of 10s to 100+ km. These strike WNW, subparallel to the structural grain in the accretionary prism to the south. Between these strands are numerous shear zones and faults that are continuous on the scale of several 100 m to several km. The majority of these also show subhorizontal to oblique slip, but the dip of the fault planes is more variable than the through-going faults. The western part of the fault system has north-dipping thrust and oblique slip faults that formed approximately synchronously with south-dipping oblique slip faults 100 km to the east. The faults formed at Roeske, S.M., Snee, L.W., and Pavlis, T.L., 2003, Dextral-slip reactivation of an arc-forearc boundary during Late Cretaceous-Early Eocene oblique convergence in the northern Cordillera, in Sisson, V.B., Roeske, S.M., and Pavlis, T.L., eds., Geology of a transpressional orogen developed during ridge-trench interaction along the North Pacifi on July 12, 2015 specialpapers.gsapubs.org Downloaded from
REGIONAL GEOLOGYThe Border Ranges fault system separates crystalline rocks of the Wrangellia composite terrane from a Mesozoic to recent progressively lower temperatures through time based on cross-cutti...