Structural
Architecture of the Central Brooks
Range Foothills, Alaska
By
T.E. Moore, C.J. Potter (U.S. Geological Survey), and P.B. O’Sullivan (Syracuse University)
Five
structural
levels underlie the Brooks Range
foothills, from lowest to highest: (1) autochthon, at a depth of ~9 km; (2)
Endicott Mountains allochthon (EMA), thickest under the northern Brooks Range
(>15 km) and wedging out northward above the autochthon; (3) higher allochthons
(HA), with a composite thickness of 1.5+ km, wedging out northward at or beyond
the termination of EMA; (4) Aptian-Albian Fortress Mountain Formation (FM),
deposited unconformably on deformed EMA and HA and thickening northward into a
>7-km-thick succession of deformed turbidites (Torok Formation); (5) gently
folded Albian-Cenomanian deltaic deposits (Nanushuk Group). The dominant
faulting pattern in levels 2–3 is thin-skinned thrusting and thrust-related
folds formed before deposition of Cretaceous strata. These structures are cut by
younger steeply south-dipping reverse faults that truncate and juxtapose
structural
levels 1–4 and expose progressively deeper
structural
levels to the
south.
Structural
levels 4–5 are juxtaposed along a north-dipping zone of south-vergent
folds and thrusts. Stratigraphic and fission-track age data suggest a kinematic
model wherein the foothills belt was formed first, by thrusting of HA and EMA as
deformational wedges onto the regionally south-dipping authochon at 140–120Ma.
After deposition of FM and Torok during mid-Cretaceous hinterland extension and
uplift, a second episode of contractional deformation at 60 Ma shortened the
older allochthonous deformational wedges (EMA, HA) and overlying strata on
north-vergent reverse faults. To the north, where the allochthons wedge out,
shortening caused duplexing in the Torok and development of a triangle zone
south of the Tuktu escarpment.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90008©2002 AAPG Pacific Section/SPE Western Region Joint Conference of Geoscientists and Petroleum Engineers, Anchorage, Alaska, May 18–23, 2002.