Thermochronologic constraints on Late Cretaceous to Cenozoic exhumation of the Bendeleben Mountains, Seward Peninsula, Alaska

Abstract In the Bendeleben Mountains, Seward Peninsula, mid‐Cretaceous granites are exposed in an uplifted block bounded on its south side by an E‐W striking normal fault. The Bendeleben fault has well‐preserved scarps 4–7 m in height that offset Holocene moraines. Seismic activity, young normal fau...

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Main Authors: Kalin T. McDannell, Jaime Toro, Jeremy K. Hourigan, Daniel Harris
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2014-10-01
Series:Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GC005424
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author Kalin T. McDannell
Jaime Toro
Jeremy K. Hourigan
Daniel Harris
author_facet Kalin T. McDannell
Jaime Toro
Jeremy K. Hourigan
Daniel Harris
author_sort Kalin T. McDannell
collection DOAJ
description Abstract In the Bendeleben Mountains, Seward Peninsula, mid‐Cretaceous granites are exposed in an uplifted block bounded on its south side by an E‐W striking normal fault. The Bendeleben fault has well‐preserved scarps 4–7 m in height that offset Holocene moraines. Seismic activity, young normal faulting, and Quaternary basaltic volcanism are all evidence of active extension. South of the Bendeleben fault, there is a 3–4 km deep basin. Fifteen apatite (U‐Th)/He ages from granitic samples of the footwall yield an Eocene weighted mean age of 41.3±4.8 Ma. Biotite 40Ar/39Ar ages from the country rock of the Bendeleben pluton are 81–83 Ma. In spite of the young fault scarps, HeFTy and Pecube thermal modeling results illustrate that rapid exhumation of the Bendeleben Mountains occurred in the Late Cretaceous‐Eocene and slowed since the Oligocene. A weak age‐elevation relationship of apatite He ages and a lack of correlation between age and distance from the fault indicate that exhumation was accomplished with minimal block rotation on a steeply dipping, long‐lived normal fault. Timing of extension in the Seward Peninsula can be correlated with deformation in the offshore Hope Basin where seismic reflection lines document Early Tertiary large‐magnitude normal faulting followed by minor post‐Miocene reactivation. The faulting observed in the Bendeleben Mountains is part of an extensional system that spans a large portion of the Bering Strait region. The tectonic model proposed in previous studies suggests that clockwise rotation of the Bering block relative to North America is the cause of extensional deformation in western Alaska.
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spelling doaj-art-c08fc50c013a4d089c0f4a70325f6f6a2025-08-20T03:16:17ZengWileyGeochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems1525-20272014-10-0115104009402310.1002/2014GC005424Thermochronologic constraints on Late Cretaceous to Cenozoic exhumation of the Bendeleben Mountains, Seward Peninsula, AlaskaKalin T. McDannell0Jaime Toro1Jeremy K. Hourigan2Daniel Harris3Earth and Environmental Sciences DepartmentLehigh UniversityBethlehem Pennsylvania USADepartment of Geology and GeographyWest Virginia UniversityMorgantown West Virginia USADepartment of Earth and Planetary SciencesUniversity of CaliforniaSanta Cruz California USADepartment of Earth SciencesCalifornia University of PennsylvaniaCalifornia Pennsylvania USAAbstract In the Bendeleben Mountains, Seward Peninsula, mid‐Cretaceous granites are exposed in an uplifted block bounded on its south side by an E‐W striking normal fault. The Bendeleben fault has well‐preserved scarps 4–7 m in height that offset Holocene moraines. Seismic activity, young normal faulting, and Quaternary basaltic volcanism are all evidence of active extension. South of the Bendeleben fault, there is a 3–4 km deep basin. Fifteen apatite (U‐Th)/He ages from granitic samples of the footwall yield an Eocene weighted mean age of 41.3±4.8 Ma. Biotite 40Ar/39Ar ages from the country rock of the Bendeleben pluton are 81–83 Ma. In spite of the young fault scarps, HeFTy and Pecube thermal modeling results illustrate that rapid exhumation of the Bendeleben Mountains occurred in the Late Cretaceous‐Eocene and slowed since the Oligocene. A weak age‐elevation relationship of apatite He ages and a lack of correlation between age and distance from the fault indicate that exhumation was accomplished with minimal block rotation on a steeply dipping, long‐lived normal fault. Timing of extension in the Seward Peninsula can be correlated with deformation in the offshore Hope Basin where seismic reflection lines document Early Tertiary large‐magnitude normal faulting followed by minor post‐Miocene reactivation. The faulting observed in the Bendeleben Mountains is part of an extensional system that spans a large portion of the Bering Strait region. The tectonic model proposed in previous studies suggests that clockwise rotation of the Bering block relative to North America is the cause of extensional deformation in western Alaska.https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GC005424U‐Th/He thermochronologySeward Peninsula (AK)active normal faults
spellingShingle Kalin T. McDannell
Jaime Toro
Jeremy K. Hourigan
Daniel Harris
Thermochronologic constraints on Late Cretaceous to Cenozoic exhumation of the Bendeleben Mountains, Seward Peninsula, Alaska
Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
U‐Th/He thermochronology
Seward Peninsula (AK)
active normal faults
title Thermochronologic constraints on Late Cretaceous to Cenozoic exhumation of the Bendeleben Mountains, Seward Peninsula, Alaska
title_full Thermochronologic constraints on Late Cretaceous to Cenozoic exhumation of the Bendeleben Mountains, Seward Peninsula, Alaska
title_fullStr Thermochronologic constraints on Late Cretaceous to Cenozoic exhumation of the Bendeleben Mountains, Seward Peninsula, Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Thermochronologic constraints on Late Cretaceous to Cenozoic exhumation of the Bendeleben Mountains, Seward Peninsula, Alaska
title_short Thermochronologic constraints on Late Cretaceous to Cenozoic exhumation of the Bendeleben Mountains, Seward Peninsula, Alaska
title_sort thermochronologic constraints on late cretaceous to cenozoic exhumation of the bendeleben mountains seward peninsula alaska
topic U‐Th/He thermochronology
Seward Peninsula (AK)
active normal faults
url https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GC005424
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