2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.tecto.2007.10.005
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Animated tectonic reconstruction of the Southern Pacific and alkaline volcanism at its convergent margins since Eocene times

Abstract: An animated reconstruction shows South Pacific plate kinematics, in the reference frame of West Antarctica, between 55 Ma and the presentday. The ocean floor in the region formed due to seafloor spreading between the Antarctic, Pacific, Phoenix and Nazca plates (a plate formed by fragmentation of the Farallon plate early in Oligocene times). The Pacific-Antarctic Ridge remained fairly stable throughout this time, migrating relatively northwestwards, by various mechanisms, behind the rapidly-moving Pacific plat… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
(44 reference statements)
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“…The oldest, at 49-48 Ma, suggests that the basin may have started to open by continental extension in Eocene times. The youngest have been interpreted in terms of a slab window opening beneath the basin following ridge-crest-trench collisions in the northwest Weddell Sea (Eagles et al, 2009a). Prominent high-amplitude normal-polarity magnetic anomalies traverse the South Orkney Microcontinent and opposing Antarctic Peninsula from east to west.…”
Section: Powell Basinmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The oldest, at 49-48 Ma, suggests that the basin may have started to open by continental extension in Eocene times. The youngest have been interpreted in terms of a slab window opening beneath the basin following ridge-crest-trench collisions in the northwest Weddell Sea (Eagles et al, 2009a). Prominent high-amplitude normal-polarity magnetic anomalies traverse the South Orkney Microcontinent and opposing Antarctic Peninsula from east to west.…”
Section: Powell Basinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Shag Rocks bank thus remained juxtaposed with South Georgia and, initially, with northern Davis Bank across the transform fault. This time may also have seen subduction of parts of a Phoenix-Nazca ridge crest south of Cape Horn, opening a slab window that has been related to the occurrence of alkali basalt volcanism at Packsaddle Island (Breitsprecher and Thorkelsen, 2009;Eagles et al, 2009a;Puig et al, 1984). By removing an along-ridge larval dispersal route between the Pacific Ocean and Scotia Sea, such a collision may also have contributed to the 25.9-13.4 Ma divergence in Kiwaid crab biogeography, which is otherwise attributed to the onset of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (Roterman et al, 2013).…”
Section: Capture Of the Central Scotia Sea And The Nascent West Scotimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Evidence that slab windows formed along the AP comes from geochemical analysis of back arc volcanoes and intrusions (Hole & Larter 1993;McCarron & Smellie 1998) and plate modelling (Eagles et al 2009a). Additionally, low-temperature thermochronology reveals uplift and exhumation at 10-15 Ma linked with development of a slab-window beneath the Adelaide Island/Bisco Island region (Guenthner et al 2010).…”
Section: Driving Mantle Processmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, this interpretation is supported by the synchronous acceleration of exhumation rates across the Patagonian Andes (Thomson et al, 2001), estimated to have occurred between 17-14.24 Ma by Blisniuk et al (2006), and between 22-18 Ma by Fosdick et al (2013) in the retro-foreland region. The dynamic Oligocene-Miocene tectonic configuration of the Patagonian Andes generated by: 1. changes in the subduction velocity, convergence rate, and obliquity of the Nazca and South American plates (Pardo-Casas and Molnar, 1987); and 2. an increase in compression and shortening related to the collision of an unstable oceanic spreading center (quadruple junction) at 18-17 Ma (Breitsprecher and Thorkelson, 2009;Eagles et al, 2009), followed by the subduction and northward migration of the Chile Ridge (Cande and Leslie, 1986;Lagabrielle et al, 2004), seem to be the primary factors triggering the uplift, concomitant widening and foreland propagation of the fold-and-thrust belt during Early Miocene times (Ramos and Ghiglione, 2008). The resulting effects of these remarkable geological processes on the past configuration of the ecosystems and biogeographic patterns of the austral biota are the subjects of our present and future investigations in Aysén and Magallanes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%