用户名: 密码: 验证码:
Turbidites of the Aleutian abyssal plain: Mineralogy, provena
详细信息      PDF全文下载
  • journal_title:Geological Society of America Bulletin
  • Contributor:RICHARD J. STEWART
  • Publisher:Geological Society of America
  • Date:1976-
  • Format:text/html
  • Language:en
  • Identifier:10.1130/0016-7606(1976)87<793:TOTAAP>2.0.CO;2
  • journal_abbrev:Geological Society of America Bulletin
  • issn:0016-7606
  • volume:87
  • issue:5
  • firstpage:793
摘要

The Aleutian abyssal plain is a fossil abyssal plain of Paleogene age in the western Gulf of Alaska. The plain is a large, southward-thinning turbidite apron now cut off from sediment sources by the Aleutian Trench. Turbidite sedimentation ceased about 30 m.y. ago, and the apron is now buried under a thick blanket of pelagic deposits. Turbidites of the plain were recovered at site 183 of the Deep Sea Drilling Project on the northern edge of the apron. The heavy-mineral fraction of sand-sized samples is mostly amphibole and epidote with minor pyroxene, garnet, and sphene. The light-mineral fraction is mostly quartzose debris and feldspars. Subordinate lithic fragments consist of roughly equal amounts of metamorphic, plutonic, sedimentary, and volcanic grains. The sand compositions are arkoses in many sandstone classifications, although if fine silt is included with clay as matrix, the sand deposits are feldspathic or lithofeldspathic graywacke. The sands are apparently first-cycle products of deep dissection into a plutonic terrane, and they contrast sharply with arc-derived volcanic sandstones of similar age common on the adjacent North American continental margin. The turbidite sands are stratigraphically remarkably constant in composition, which indicates derivation from virtually the same terrane through a time span approaching 20 m.y.

Comparison of Aleutian plain data with the compositions of coeval sedimentary rocks from the northeast Pacific margin shows that the Kodiak shelf area includes possible proximal equivalents of the more distal turbidites. Derivation from the volcaniclastic Mesozoic flysch of the Shumagin-Kodiak shelf is unlikely; more probably the sediments were derived from primary plutonic sources. The turbidites also resemble deposits in the Chugach Mountains and the younger turbidites of the Alaskan abyssal plain and could conceivably have been derived from the coast ranges of southeastern Alaska or western British Columbia. The Aleutian plain sediment most likely was not derived from as far south as the Oregon-Washington continental margin, where coeval sedimentary deposits are dominantly volcaniclastic.

This work lends some support to earlier suggestions that the fan-shaped turbidite body originated on the continental margin in the Gulf of Alaska, and it supports models of little or modest motion of the Pacific plate relative to North America. The mineralogy alone cannot refute more ambitious motion models, but when combined with previously published evidence on size of the plain, sediment thicknesses, and nan-nofossil species diversity, the data seriously constrain models requiring large-scale northwestward motion of the Pacific plate in post-Eocene time.

© 2004-2018 中国地质图书馆版权所有 京ICP备05064691号 京公网安备11010802017129号

地址:北京市海淀区学院路29号 邮编:100083

电话:办公室:(+86 10)66554848;文献借阅、咨询服务、科技查新:66554700