首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


Tectonic accretion of a subducted intraoceanic remnant arc in Cretaceous Hokkaido, Japan, and implications for evolution of the Pacific northwest
Authors:Hayato  Ueda and Sumio  Miyashita
Institution:Division of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Hokkaido University, North 10 West 8 Kita-ku, Sapporo 060-0810, Japan (email: ) and;Department of Geology, Faculty of Science, Niigata University, 8050 Ikarashi 2-no-cho, Niigata 950-2181, Japan
Abstract:Abstract   An accretionary complex, which contains fragments of a remnant island arc, was newly recognized in the Cretaceous accretionary terranes in Hokkaido, Japan. It consists of volcanics, volcanic conglomerate, intermediate to ultramafic intrusive rocks with island-arc affinity including boninitic rocks, accompanied by chert and deformed terrigenous turbidites. Compared with the results of modern oceanic surveys, the preserved sequence from island-arc volcanics to chert, via reworked volcanics, is indicative of intraoceanic remnant arc, because the sequence suggests an inactive arc isolated within a pelagic environment before its accretion. The age of a subducting oceanic crust can be discontinuous before and after a remnant-arc subduction, resulting in abrupt changes in accretion style and metamorphism, as seen in Cretaceous Hokkaido. Subduction of such an intraoceanic remnant arc suggests that the subducted oceanic plate in the Cretaceous was not an extensive oceanic plate like the Izanagi and/or Kula Plates as previously believed by many authors, but a marginal basin plate having an arc–back-arc system like the present-day Philippine Sea Plate.
Keywords:accretionary complex  circum-Pacific ophiolite  Hokkaido  Idonnappu zone  intraoceanic remnant arc  subduction zone tectonics
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号