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Consisting of papers that have appeared recently in International
Geology Review, Middle American Terranes, Potential Correlatives,
and Orogenic Processes focuses on Middle American terranes in which
tectonic processes, including flat-slab subduction, for orogenic
development are examined at various times since the late
Mesoproterozoic: at 1 Ga, through the Paleozoic, and into the
Cenozoic. Many papers relate the evolution of the Middle American
terranes over the past billion years to global scale events, and a
second theme running through the book relates to the
supercontinents, Rodinia and Pangea, the geometry of their
amalgamation and breakup, and the processes responsible. Highlights
include: * An update on the geographic record, tectonic setting,
and provenance of these terranes * Documentation of allocthonous
nature and position peripheral to Amazonia of the ~1 Ga basement of
southern Mexico * Data demonstrating that the basement rocks were
involved in several Phanerozoic tectonic events * An examination of
new evidence of a Late Paleozoic event associated with the
amalgamation of Pangea overprinting the ~1 Ga basement and the
Paleozoic units lying chiefly to the west and south of it * An
exploration of the following potential correlatives: (1) events in
Europe on the northern margin of Gondwana; (2) the Late
Silurian-Devonian Acadian orogeny in the Appalachian, which is
inferred to have resulted from flat-slab subduction related to
overriding a plume; and (3) Mesozoic-Cenozoic events along the
western margin of Laurentia * A discussion of possible mechanisms
for the initiation of orogeny, flat-slab subduction in the Laramide
orogeny, and hypotheses relating to the amalgamation and breakup of
supercontine
Consisting of papers that have appeared recently in International
Geology Review, Middle American Terranes, Potential Correlatives,
and Orogenic Processes focuses on Middle American terranes in which
tectonic processes, including flat-slab subduction, for orogenic
development are examined at various times since the late
Mesoproterozoic: at 1 Ga, through the Paleozoic, and into the
Cenozoic. Many papers relate the evolution of the Middle American
terranes over the past billion years to global scale events, and a
second theme running through the book relates to the
supercontinents, Rodinia and Pangea, the geometry of their
amalgamation and breakup, and the processes responsible. Highlights
include: * An update on the geographic record, tectonic setting,
and provenance of these terranes * Documentation of allocthonous
nature and position peripheral to Amazonia of the ~1 Ga basement of
southern Mexico * Data demonstrating that the basement rocks were
involved in several Phanerozoic tectonic events * An examination of
new evidence of a Late Paleozoic event associated with the
amalgamation of Pangea overprinting the ~1 Ga basement and the
Paleozoic units lying chiefly to the west and south of it * An
exploration of the following potential correlatives: (1) events in
Europe on the northern margin of Gondwana; (2) the Late
Silurian-Devonian Acadian orogeny in the Appalachian, which is
inferred to have resulted from flat-slab subduction related to
overriding a plume; and (3) Mesozoic-Cenozoic events along the
western margin of Laurentia * A discussion of possible mechanisms
for the initiation of orogeny, flat-slab subduction in the Laramide
orogeny, and hypotheses relating to the amalgamation and breakup of
supercontine
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