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dc.contributor.authorBrumley, Kelley
dc.date.accessioned2022-03-17T22:33:02Z
dc.date.available2022-03-17T22:33:02Z
dc.date.issued2009-08
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11122/12783
dc.descriptionThesis (M.S.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2009en_US
dc.description.abstract"The Chukchi Borderland is a region of extended continental crust within the Amerasia Basin and is bounded on one side by oceanic crust of the Canada Basin. Because of its central location within the basin, tectonic models for the reconstruction of the Arctic Ocean, must include the Chukchi Borderland although there is no consensus about its pre-rift location or kinematic development. In recent years bathymetric data have been collected that can offer constraint on the tectonic evolution of the Amerasia Basin by providing details about the geomorphology of the intra-basinal ridges allowing comparison of bathymetric features to those in other ocean basins. Bathymetric information in conjunction with multi-channel seismic and chirp sub-bottom profiler data show the location and strike of inferred faults used to determine rift directions which then provide constraint on tectonic reconstructions. The central Amerasia Basin, which includes the Chukchi Borderland, Mendeleev Ridge and south central Alpha Ridge, has experienced significant extension in generally the same direction and probably during one event. This type of plate boundary scale extension requires the development of accommodation faulting or transfer zones that facilitate the amalgamation of long fault segments. Features consistent with this type of faulting are observed throughout the Chukchi Borderland. There is no evidence of compression along the Northwind Ridge nor is there any indication of a strike-slip boundary within the Northern Chukchi Borderland as some tectonic models suggest. Whichever model is preferred, the geomorphology of the intra-basinal ridges must be taken into account and used as constraint for the reconstruction of the Amerasia Basin"--Leaf iiien_US
dc.description.tableofcontents1. Introduction -- 1.1. Overview -- 1.2. Amerasia Basin provinces -- 1.3. Bathymetry and tectonic reconstructions -- 1.3.1. Early ideas -- 1.3.2. Heezan and Ewing -- 1.3.3. Plate tectonics and Cold War data -- 1.3.4. New data, new methods -- 2. Method -- 2.1. Bathymetric comparisons -- 2.1.1. Healy data -- 2.1.2. Seismic reflection -- 2.2. Geomorphic considerations -- 2.2.1. Landslides -- 2.2.2. Slope gullies -- 2.2.3. Pockmarks -- 2.2.4. Fault scarps -- 3. Observations -- 3.1. Amerasia basin -- 3.1.1. Subduction in the Arctic -- 3.1.2. High Arctic large igneous province (HALIP) -- 3.1.3. Dredged rock samples, 2008 -- 3.1.4. Radiating dyke swarm -- 3.2. Amerasia basin summary -- 3.2.1. Extension on Alpha and Mendeleev ridges -- 4. Chukchi borderland -- 4.1. Chukchi borderland bathymetric analogue -- 4.1.2. Northern Chukchi borderland and Nautilus basin -- 4.2. Northwind ridge -- 4.2.1. Northwind escarpment -- 4.3. Boundaries of major Northwind Fault Block -- 4.3.1. Hanna Canyon -- 4.3.2. Sags and Listric slump faulting -- 4.4. Compression in the borderland? -- 4.4.1. Seismic evidence for extension -- 4.5. Northwind basin -- 4.6. The Chukchi Plateau -- 5. Plate boundary scale rifting in the Chukchi borderland -- 5.1. Transfer zones -- 5.1.1. Central Chukchi rift -- 5.1.2. Remnant accommodation zones -- 6. Summary and conclusions -- References cited.en_US
dc.language.isoen_USen_US
dc.subjectMorphotectonicsen_US
dc.subjectPlate tectonicsen_US
dc.subjectSubmarine topographyen_US
dc.subjectSeamountsen_US
dc.subjectOceanic plateausen_US
dc.subjectOcean bottomen_US
dc.subjectSubmarine valleysen_US
dc.subjectArctic Oceanen_US
dc.titleTectonic geomorphology of the Chukchi borderland: constraint for tectonic reconstruction modelsen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US
dc.type.degreemsen_US
dc.identifier.departmentDepartment of Geology and Geophysicsen_US
refterms.dateFOA2022-03-17T22:33:02Z


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