4.4 Article

Structure of the Northern Altar Pull-Apart Basin Revealed by a 2D Reflection Seismic Survey: Evolution of the Gulf of California Shear Zone in Northwest Mexico

Journal

PURE AND APPLIED GEOPHYSICS
Volume 179, Issue 9, Pages 3191-3216

Publisher

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00024-022-03138-1

Keywords

Seismic reflection; Altar basin; Cerro Prieto fault; Colorado River delta; Bouse formation; Gulf of California shear zone

Funding

  1. CONACYT, Mexico
  2. US National Science Foundation [EAR-1728690]

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The Altar basin, located in the northern Gulf of California and Salton Trough, is a segmented marginal basin formed during the Late Miocene-Early Pliocene oblique rift system. This study uses processed seismic data to characterize the tectonostratigraphic features of the basin, including deep structure, faults controlling subsidence, and accumulation of deltaic deposits. The results show the presence of NW-trending faults, three major seismic reflectors defining three units, and correlations with the Bouse Formation in SW Arizona and SE California. The study also suggests that the Altar fault is continuous with the Dunas fault in SE California.
The northern Gulf of California and Salton Trough contain segmented marginal basins abandoned during the oblique rift system's evolution during Late Miocene-Early Pliocene. The Altar basin, in northwestern Sonora, Mexico, contains a > 5 km-thick sedimentary record representing the first marine incursion (Late Miocene) of the Gulf of California seaway followed by the first deltaic deposits of the Colorado River. 2D reflection seismic lines were processed and interpreted to characterize tectonostrati-graphic features of the transtensional Pacific-North America plate boundary in the northern Altar basin (deep structure, faults controlling the subsidence and accumulation of deltaic deposits). The results show the acoustic basement becoming increasingly shallow toward the northeast, new NW-trending faults, and three major seismic reflectors defining the base of three units: A (oldest), B, and C (youngest). Through similarities in sequence stratigraphy and fauna, we correlate Unit A with the Bouse Formation (SW Arizona and SE California), implying its presence in northwest Mexico. The Altar fault strikes similar to N45 degrees W and aligns with the Dunas fault (SE California), suggesting that these faults are the same continuous structure. Seismic horizons above horizon C are less affected by faults. In contrast, horizons A, B and C are cut by faults, have steeper dips, and are laterally discontinuous. We propose the deposition of unfaulted strata occurred after the latest Pliocene abandonment of the Altar basin. Cessation of major transtensional activity in the Altar basin is coincident with a regional westward shift of transtensional plate boundary deformation, preserving a record of the evolving Gulf of California shear zone in northwest Mexico.

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