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Structural evolution of the Early Tertiary Cantwell Basin, south central Alaska
Author(s) -
Hickman Robert G.,
Sherwood Kirk W.,
Craddock Campbell
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
tectonics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.465
H-Index - 134
eISSN - 1944-9194
pISSN - 0278-7407
DOI - 10.1029/tc009i006p01433
Subject(s) - geology , sinistral and dextral , structural basin , alluvial fan , strike slip tectonics , seismology , clockwise , fault (geology) , foreland basin , pull apart basin , paleontology , geomorphology , sedimentary basin , fold (higher order function) , mechanical engineering , engineering
The Cantwell Basin is a Paleogene intermontane basin located in south central Alaska. The Cantwell Formation which fills the basin is as much as 4000 m thick and consists of a lower sedimentary sequence of fluvial and alluvial fan origin and an upper sequence of calc‐alkaline volcanic rocks. The east trending Cantwell Basin developed as a southward thickening asymmetrical graben between the Hines Creek and Denali faults. Substantial dip‐slip displacement and local, dextral strike‐slip displacement on the Hines Creek fault during basin subsidence was followed by dip‐slip displacement in late Cenozoic time. Strike‐slip movement along the Denali fault, to the south, exerted primary control on basin subsidence and subsequent structural inversion. During the Paleocene, Kula plate motion was nearly perpendicular to the axis of the Cantwell Basin; however, Kula plate motion was oblique to southeastern Alaska and produced regional dextral slip on the Denali fault system. The Cantwell Basin appears to have developed as a pull‐apart basin in which northwest striking syndepositional normal faults linked the Denali fault with the western part of the Hines Creek fault. In early Eocene time an increased rate of plate convergence resulted in substantial displacement on the Denali fault. Concurrent counterclockwise rotation of southern Alaska produced a regional constraining bend in the Denali fault and resulted in strong compressional deformation of the Cantwell Basin.