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Circum-arctic plate accretion - Isolating part of a pacific plate to form the nucleus of the Arctic Basin

January 1, 1980

A mosaic of large lithospheric plates rims the Arctic Ocean Basin, and foldbelts between these plates contain numerous allochthonous microplates. A new model for continental drift and microplate accretion proposes that prior to the late Mesozoic the Kula plate extended from the Pacific into the Arctic. By a process of circumpolar drift and microplate accretion, fragments of the Pacific basin, including parts of the Kula plate, were cut off and isolated in the Arctic Ocean, the Yukon-Koyukuk basin in Alaska, and the Bering Sea.

Publication Year 1980
Title Circum-arctic plate accretion - Isolating part of a pacific plate to form the nucleus of the Arctic Basin
DOI 10.1016/0012-821X(80)90199-5
Authors M. Churkin, J.H. Trexler
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Index ID 70012610
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse