MAGNETIC GLACIAL AND FLUVIAL SEDIMENTS IN THE HOLITNA BASIN AND OTHER CENOZOIC BASINS IN ALASKA - RELEVANCE FOR THE AEROMAGNETIC SEARCH FOR HYDROCARBONS
CADY, John W., GeoPeregrino, 3955 Douglas Mountain Drive, Golden, CO 80403-7701, [email protected]
A high-resolution aeromagnetic survey was flown in the Cenozoic Holitna basin
in interior Alaska for coal bed methane exploration. Interpretation of the
survey shows that many short-wavelength magnetic highs are caused by magnetic
sediments derived from both igneous rocks of the Wrangellia composite terrane
(WCT) and Tertiary granodiorite to tonalite superimposed on the WCT. The
magnetic sediments were transported as glacial till and outwash. At their
greatest (pre-Wisconsin) advance, glaciers crossed the Denali fault and
deposited glacial till in the pull-apart Holitna basin, producing magnetic highs
aligned with the fault. The short-wavelength magnetic highs occur as peaks on a
low-amplitude (100-200 nT) regional magnetic high in the Holitna and other
interior basins. Isolated igneous outcrops within the basins cause only local
weak magnetic anomalies. Thus igneous rocks within or beneath the basins are not
a compelling explanation for the regional magnetic high over the basins. In
contrast, regional magnetic anomalies over igneous rocks in the WCT have high
amplitudes (500-2500 nT). I conclude that the regional magnetic high in interior
Alaska is partially caused by magnetic sediments derived from the WCT. Late
Cenozoic uplift (5 km at Denali) of magnetic igneous rocks provided abundant
magnetic sediments. Glaciers were larger and more active on the southern flank
of the Alaska Range and Wrangell Mountains. Abundant magnetic sediments were
transported to the south via the Susitna and Matanuska Valleys to Cook Inlet
basin, all of which have higher amplitude (200-400 nT) magnetic highs than do
the interior basins. The presence of magnetic sediments in the interior and
southern basins preclude the effective use of magnetic analysis to determine
depth to magnetic basement. The term "magnetic basement" is inappropriate in
non-cratonic Alaska, where continental crust is under construction. Magnetic
analysis is useful, however, for tracking magnetite from its igneous sources to
its sedimentary sinks. If carbon derived from Mesozoic and Cenozoic coal bearing
strata eroded from the uplifted Alaska Range and Wrangell Mountains followed
similar paths as sedimentary magnetite, then magnetic analysis may help locate
coal bed methane and
basin
-
centered
hydrocarbons contained in magnetic clastic
sediments.