LATE CENOZOIC TECTONIC EVOLUTION OF THE LOS-ANGELES BASIN AND INNER CALIFORNIA BORDERLAND - A MODEL FOR CORE COMPLEX LIKE CRUSTAL EXTENSION

Authors
Citation
Jk. Crouch et J. Suppe, LATE CENOZOIC TECTONIC EVOLUTION OF THE LOS-ANGELES BASIN AND INNER CALIFORNIA BORDERLAND - A MODEL FOR CORE COMPLEX LIKE CRUSTAL EXTENSION, Geological Society of America bulletin, 105(11), 1993, pp. 1415-1434
Citations number
134
Categorie Soggetti
Geology
ISSN journal
00167606
Volume
105
Issue
11
Year of publication
1993
Pages
1415 - 1434
Database
ISI
SICI code
0016-7606(1993)105:11<1415:LCTEOT>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
We propose that the Los Angeles basin-inner California borderland (LAB -IB) and the southern borderland off Baja California formed by large-m agnitude crustal extension beginning in latest Oligocene-earliest Mioc ene time, and that these regions represent major late Cenozoic rifts. The southern borderland is analogous to the Gulf of California rift, b ut the onset of rifting in this region may have preceded the opening o f the Gulf by as much as 15 to 20 m.y. The LAB-IB rift is more complex than the southern borderland because it formed in the wake of the rot ating western Transverse Ranges (WTR), a large crustal block that has undergone more than 90-degrees of Neogene clockwise rotation. Total ex tension in both rifted regions is estimated to be in excess of 200 km, or comparable to the magnitude of late Cenozoic crustal extension now estimated for the Basin and Range province. Also, like the Basin and Range, the crustal floors of the basins in these highly extended domai ns are characterized by metamorphic core complexes and detachment faul ts, voluminous Miocene volcanic rocks, and hanging-wall fragments of p re-rift strata and basement rocks stranded atop detachments during ext ension. In support of this model, we synthesize a wide variety of exis ting geologic data and present interpretations of new geophysical data (seismic reflection profiles). These profiles image features that we infer are detachment faults and overlying remnants of fragmented and r ifted hanging-wall rocks. We also suggest that a similar, but slightly earlier onset of crustal extension affected the Santa Maria basin and adjacent regions in central California, and that the southern margin of this ''Santa Maria basin rift'' was overridden during Neogene clock wise rotation of the WTR.