PALEOMAGNETISM, PALEOLATITUDES AND RECONSTRUCTIONS OF NORTHEAST RUSSIA AND ALASKA
STONE, David B., Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska, 903 Koyukuk Drive, P.O.Box 757320, Fairbanks, AK 99775, [email protected]
The general consensus is that what is now the Chukotka-Alaska composite
terrane migrated across the Arctic Ocean, closing the South Anuyi and Angayucham
oceanic basins to join the terranes of Northeast Russia and Alaska. It is also
well established that the major terranes of interior Northeast Russia, notably
the Omulevka and Omolon terranes, migrated from southerly latitudes to roughly
their present latitudes in mid-Mesozoic time. On the Alaskan side, the travel
histories of the terranes making up interior Alaska (
north
of the very mobile
southern terranes and south of the Arctic Alaska terrane) is not well known,
however they too appear to have been roughly in place by mid-Mesozoic time.
There is very little reliable paleomagnetic data for the Chukotka-Arctic Alaska
composite terrane. However there are paleomagnetic data for the combined
terranes of interior NE Russia and Alaska. The available paleomagnetic data for
late Cretaceous – Early Tertiary time suggest that they may have been displaced
to the
north
of their present locations when the Chukotka-Alaska terrane
arrived, thus requiring the Arctic Ocean to continue opening after the South
Anuyi and Angayucham sutures formed. Most of the data supporting this northward
displacement come from volcanic rocks associated with the Okhotsk-Chukotka
Volcanic Belt (OCVB) which overlaps many of the interior terranes. Comparing the
paleomagnetic results from these rocks with the latest Apparent Polar Wander
(APW) path for
North
America
and that for Northeast Russia (derived from the
Eurasian APW path) it seems that the OCVB was more closely connected to the
North
America
than Siberia in addition to being a little
north
of its present
position with respect to either of these continental blocks.