EARLY CRETACEOUS TO TERTIARY EVOLUTION OF THE COLVILLE FORELAND BASIN –
LINKED
TECTONICS
AND SEDIMENTATION
HOUSEKNECHT, David W., U.S. Geol Survey, 956 National Center, Reston, VA 20175, [email protected]
Although the initial development of the Colville foreland basin likely was
related to collision of North America with oceanic terranes during middle
Jurassic to early Cretaceous (Neocomian) time, subsequent tectonic dismemberment
and cannabilism of nascent foreland-basin strata limit reconstruction of that
phase of basin history. In contrast, relatively well preserved Barremian to
Tertiary strata record evolution of the Colville foreland basin as the Arctic
Alaska microplate simultaneously rifted from North America on one side and
collided with oceanic terranes on the opposite side. Coeval rift-shoulder
development along the northern (present coordinates)
plate
margin and additional
collision along the southern
plate
margin largely controlled regional patterns
of uplift and subsidence. Although the rift shoulder progressively subsided
owing to thermal contraction and sediment loading, it acted as an accommodation
sill during foreland basin filling. Episodic contraction, punctuated by
extension and magmatism, along the Brooks Range – Herald arch – Chukotka orogen
controlled accommodation and sediment flux across the foreland. These regional
patterns were influenced by an earlier structural grain inherited mostly from
pre-Permian rifting.
Brookian strata of Barremian to Tertiary age represent at least four distinct phases of linked tectonic-sedimentary evolution. (1) Barremian-Cenomanian strata were deposited in foredeep and foreland platform settings characterized by tectonically driven accommodation and a huge sediment flux from the orogen. (2) Turonian-Maastrichtian strata accumulated in passive accommodation space during tectonic quiescence and modest sediment flux. (3) Paleocene-Eocene strata were deposited during tectonic segmentation of the foreland involving transtension in the Chukchi Sea, low-relief uplift across the western North Slope, and tectonic subsidence linked to renewed northward migration of the Brooks Range across the eastern North Slope. This phase was characterized by high sediment flux and the complete filling of the foreland basin in the east. (4) Post-Eocene strata were deposited as generally northward offlapping sequences on the rifted-margin and into the Canada basin, with high sediment flux related to the north-verging orogenic belt.