The Sierra Madre Oriental Orocline: Paleomagnetism of the Nazas Province in NE Mexico
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Guerra Roel, Rafael; Pastor Galán, Daniel; Chávez Cabello, Gabriel; Ramírez Peña, César Francisco; Aranda Gómez, José Jorge; Patiño Méndez, Gerardo; Nova, R. Giovanny; Rodríguez Parra, Alejandro; Molina Garza, Roberto StanleyEditorial
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Fecha
2024-09-16Referencia bibliográfica
Guerra Roel, R., Pastor Galán, D., Chávez‐ Cabello, G., Ramírez‐Peña, C. F., Aranda Gómez, J. J., Patiño Méndez, G., et al. (2024). The Sierra Madre Oriental Orocline: Paleomagnetism of the Nazas province in NE Mexico. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 129, e2024JB029239. https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JB029239
Patrocinador
CONAHCYT for the support in the form of a doctoral scholarship; Ramón y Cajal Fellow granted to DPG (RYC2019‐028244‐I) funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and by the “European Social Fund Investing in your future”; Grant PID2021‐128801NA‐I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033; Ramón y Cajal Fellow RYC2019‐028244‐I funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and by the “European Social Fund Investing in your future”; Leonardo Grant 2022 to researchers and cultural creators (LEO22‐2‐3010) from the bank BBVA; PAICYT projects: CT1248‐20, CT1626‐21, and 36‐CAT‐2022; PAPIIT UNAM Grants IN106820 and IG101523; Mexican Science Agency (CONAHCYT) for the support in the form of a MSc scholarshipResumen
Curved mountain belts are spectacular natural features that contain crucial 3D information about the tectonic evolution of orogenic systems in the absence of other kinematic markers. The Mesozoic units exposed in the Mexican Fold and Thrust Belt in northeastern Mexico show a striking curvature, whose kinematic history has not been studied. The existing tectonic models of the region simply assumed the shape of the tectonic units as an inherent feature to the orogen. We investigated the kinematic history of this curvature through paleomagnetism and rock magnetism analyses, coupled with an exhaustive review of available published literature. The studied data sets indicate a protracted history of (re)magnetizations that occurred during the Late Jurassic-Paleocene times at least during the Late Jurassic, Cretaceous and early Eocene. More significantly, they show significant counterclockwise rotations in the northern flank of the curvature and moderate clockwise vertical axis rotations along its southern flank. This data set suggests that the Sierra Madre Oriental was a linear belt that experienced oroclinal bending or buckling during the Cretaceous to early Eocene period (120–50 Ma).