@inbook{dfeda5deead542e0b7b92301f4dd9723,
title = "Architecture of pericratonic Yukon-Tanana terrane in the northern Cordillera",
abstract = "West-central Yukon and eastern Alaska are characterized by widespread metamorphic rocks that form part of the allochthonous, composite Yukon-Tanana terrane and parautochthonous North American margin. Structural windows through the Yukon-Tanana terrane exposeparautochthonous North American margin in that broad region, particularly as mid-Cretaceous extensional core complexes. Both the Yukon-Tanana terrane and parautochthonous North American margin share the same Late Devonian history, making their discrimination difficult; however, distinct post-LateDevonian magmatic and metamorphic histories assist in discriminating Yukon-Tanana terrane from parautochthonous North American margin rocks. The suture between Yukon-Tanana terrane and parautochthonous North American margin is obscured by many episodes of high-strain deformation. Their main bounding structure is probably a Jurassic to Cretaceous thrust, which has been locally reactivated as a mid-Cretaceous extensional shear zone. Crustal-scale structures within composite Yukon-Tanana terrane (e.g. the Yukon River shear zone) are commonly marked by discontinuous mafic-ultramafic complexes. Some of these complexes represent orogenic peridotites that were structurally exhumed into the Yukon-Tanana terrane in the Middle Permian.",
author = "Ryan, {J J} and A Zagorevski and Cleven, {N R} and Parsons, {A J} and Joyce, {N L}",
year = "2021",
month = nov,
day = "25",
doi = "10.4095/326062",
language = "English",
volume = "610",
series = "Bulletin",
publisher = "Geological Survey of Canada",
pages = "67--93",
booktitle = "Northern Cordillera geology: a synthesis of research from the Geo-mapping for Energy and Minerals program, British Columbia and Yukon",
}