New Timing and Depth Constraints for the Catalina Metamorphic Core Complex, Southeast Arizona
Publisher
AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNIONCitation
Ducea, M. N., Triantafyllou, A., & Krcmaric, J. (2020). New timing and depth constraints for the Catalina Metamorphic Core complex, Southeast Arizona. Tectonics, 39(8), e2020TC006383.Journal
TECTONICSRights
© 2020 American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
The Santa Catalina-Tortolita-Rincon Mountains of Southeast Arizona are a classic metamorphic core complex (MCC) and represent footwall exposures of crustal rocks exhumed by a detachment system. This study presents new evidence for the formation of the majority of ductile deformation during the Eocene (similar to 46 Ma), synchronous with the emplacement of the regionally significant Wilderness Sills Suite (57-45 Ma). The evidence is provided by Eocene U-Pb ages of syn- to late kinematic dikes emplaced in the principal ductile mylonitic fabric of the Catalina forerange, earlier than the brittle normal fault system and the formation of Tucson basin beginning with the latest Oligocene. Well-documented shear sense indicators may not reflect extension at that time (Eocene), but more likely the direction of crustal flow now rotated during later extension. Muscovite-plagioclase Rb-Sr isochron ages of three mylonitic rocks are all clustered around 34 Ma, which is inferred to be the last age when these rocks were being deformed under ductile conditions following the emplacement of the Wilderness Sills Suite and various related dikes. Biotite-plagioclase Rb-Sr ages on the same rocks demonstrate that the section cooled below similar to 300 degrees C at 25-26 Ma during the development of normal faulting. Normal faulting was synchronous with the emplacement of the Catalina Intrusive Suite. New U-Pb age results for Catalina Intrusive Suite indicate a combined mean age of 24.9 Ma. Chemical compositions of hornblende-plagioclase pairs were obtained on six Catalina Intrusive Suite samples; depth estimates for the emplacement of the Catalina Intrusive Suite average of about 6 km. These results suggest that the exposed Catalina ductile detachment system was at about 5 km beneath the surface at 25 Ma. These new data bring new light into the development of this core complex and suggest that the similarity in orientations ofprincipalductile and brittle fabrics at the Catalina MCC locality are coincidental. Neither was the principal ductile fabric developed during the low-angle normal faulting of the latest Oligocene nor was this exposed section a midcrustal one at that time. Transient, pluton emplacement-enhanced, and extension-related ductile deformation at shallow crustal levels operated locally at similar to 25 Ma but that does not account for the development of the majority of the Catalina MCC mylonites.Note
6 month embargo; first published online 15 August 2020ISSN
0278-7407EISSN
1944-9194Version
Final published versionae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1029/2020TC006383