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Christopher R. Scotese

Bio: Christopher R. Scotese is an academic researcher from Northwestern University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plate tectonics & Cretaceous. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 98 publications receiving 8317 citations. Previous affiliations of Christopher R. Scotese include University of Texas at Arlington & University of Chicago.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors reviewed the highlights of the 1988 Symposium on Palaeozoic Biogeography and Palaeogeography, and presented a revised set of 20 base maps that incorporate much of the new data presented at the symposium.
Abstract: We review the highlights of the 1988 symposium on Palaeozoic Biogeography and Palaeogeography, and present a revised set of 20 Palaeozoic base maps that incorporate much of the new data presented at the symposium. The maps include 5 major innovations: (1) A preliminary attempt has been made to describe the motion of the Cathaysian terranes during the Palaeozoic; (2) a more detailed description of the events surrounding the Iapetus Ocean is presented; (3) an alternative apparent polar wandering path for Gondwana has been constructed using the changing distributions of palaeoclimatically restricted lithofacies; (4) new palaeomagnetic data have been incorporated that places Laurentia and Baltica at more southerly latitudes, and adjacent to Gondwana, during the Early Devonian; Siberia is also placed further south in the light of biogeographic data presented at the symposium; (5) Kazakhstan is treated as a westward extension of Siberia, rather than as a separate palaeocontinent. The relationships between climatic changes, sea level changes, evolutionary radiations and intercontinental migrations are discussed

1,105 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present 50 maps which have been designed for use by the geologic community in preparing paleogeographic, biogeographical, climatologic, and tectonic reconstructions of the Paleozoic periods.
Abstract: This paper contains 50 maps which have been designed for use by the geologic community in preparing paleogeographic, biogeographic, climatologic, and tectonic reconstructions of the Paleozoic periods. Seven maps for each of seven Paleozoic intervals are included, plus a suture map showing the outlines of the Paleozoic continents in their present positions. The intervals chosen are the Late Cambrian (Franconian), Middle Ordovician (Llandeilian-earliest Caradocian), Middle Silurian (Wenlockian), Early Devonian (Emsian), Early Carboniferous (Visean), Late Carboniferous (Westphalian CD), and Late Permian (Kazanian). The paleomagnetic information used to orient the continents is given. For each interval, three types of maps are included, one locality map with place names labelled, four paleogeographic maps with our interpretation of the distribution of mountains, lowlands, shallow seas, and deep oceans, and two outline maps for those who prefer to make their own paleogeographic interpretations. Several project...

558 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented nine reconstructions for the Mesozoic and Cenozoic, based on previously published sea-floor spreading isochrons, and tested the capabilities and accuracy of interactive computer graphic methods of plate tectonic reconstruction.

553 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a method for estimating sea level for the last 108 million years through backstripping of corehole data from the New Jersey and Delaware Coastal Plains.
Abstract: Sea level has been estimated for the last 108 million years through backstripping of corehole data from the New Jersey and Delaware Coastal Plains. Inherent errors due to thismethod of calculating sea level are discussed, including uncertainties in ages, depth of deposition and the model used for tectonic subsidence. Problems arising from the two-dimensional aspects of subsidence and response to sediment loads are also addressed. The rates and magnitudes of sea-level change are consistent with at least ephemeral ice sheets throughout the studied interval.Million-year sea-level cycles are, for the most part, consistent within the study area suggesting that they may be eustatic in origin. This conclusion is corroborated by correlation between sequence boundaries and unconformities in New Zealand. The resulting long-term curve suggests that sea level ranged fromabout 75-110 min the Late Cretaceous, reached a maximum of about 150m in the Early Eocene and fell to zero in the Miocene. The Late Cretaceous long-term (107 years) magnitude is about 100-150mless than sea level predicted from ocean volume. This discrepancy can be reconciled by assuming that dynamic topography in New Jersey was driven by North America overriding the subducted Farallon plate. However, geodynamic models of this effect do not resolve the problemin that they require Eocene sea level to be significantly higher in the New Jersey region than the global average.

486 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a more realistic map of the distribution of rainfall through time is presented, based on maps of atmospheric circulation that have been successfully used to predict the distributions of some petroleum source beds and phosphorites.

433 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Oct 1990-Nature
TL;DR: In this paper, the trace-element geochemical properties of the adakites (termed "adakites") of modern island and continental arcs are shown to be consistent with a derivation by partial melting of the subducted slab, and in particular that subducting lithosphere younger than 25 Myr seems to be required for slab melting to occur.
Abstract: MOST volcanic rocks in modern island and continental arcs are probably derived from melting of the mantle wedge, induced by hydrous fluids released during dehydration reactions in the subducted lithosphere1. Arc tholeiitic and calc-alkaline basaltic magmas are produced by partial melting of the mantle, and then evolve by crystal fractionation (with or without assimilation and magma mixing) to more silicic magmas2—basalt, andesite, dacite and rhyolite suites. Although most arc magmas are generated by these petrogenetic processes, rocks with the geochemical characteristics of melts derived directly from the subducted lithosphere are present in some modern arcs where relatively young and hot lithosphere is being subducted. These andesites, dacites and sodic rhyolites (dacites seem to be the most common products) or their intrusive equivalents (tonalites and trondhjemites) are usually not associated with parental basaltic magmas3. Here we show that the trace-element geochemistry of these magmas (termed 'adakites') is consistent with a derivation by partial melting of the subducted slab, and in particular that subducting lithosphere younger than 25 Myr seems to be required for slab melting to occur.

3,524 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
22 Jul 1993-Nature
TL;DR: A new tectonic model, postulating the growth of giant subduction-accretion complexes along a single magmatic arc now found contorted between Siberia and Baltica, shows that Asia grew by 5.3 million square kilometres during the Palaeozoic era as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: A new tectonic model, postulating the growth of giant subduction-accretion complexes along a single magmatic arc now found contorted between Siberia and Baltica, shows that Asia grew by 5.3 million square kilometres during the Palaeozoic era. Half of this growth may have occurred by the addition of juvenile crust newly extracted from the mantle, supporting models of considerable continental growth continuing throughout the Phanerozoic eon.

3,180 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Central Asian Orogenic Belt ( c. 1000-250 Ma) formed by accretion of island arcs, ophiolites, oceanic islands, seamounts, accretionary wedges, and oceanic plateaux and microcontinents in a manner comparable with that of circum-Pacific Mesozoic-Cenozoic orogens is studied in this article.
Abstract: The Central Asian Orogenic Belt ( c . 1000–250 Ma) formed by accretion of island arcs, ophiolites, oceanic islands, seamounts, accretionary wedges, oceanic plateaux and microcontinents in a manner comparable with that of circum-Pacific Mesozoic–Cenozoic accretionary orogens. Palaeomagnetic and palaeofloral data indicate that early accretion (Vendian–Ordovician) took place when Baltica and Siberia were separated by a wide ocean. Island arcs and Precambrian microcontinents accreted to the active margins of the two continents or amalgamated in an oceanic setting (as in Kazakhstan) by roll-back and collision, forming a huge accretionary collage. The Palaeo-Asian Ocean closed in the Permian with formation of the Solonker suture. We evaluate contrasting tectonic models for the evolution of the orogenic belt. Current information provides little support for the main tenets of the one- or three-arc Kipchak model; current data suggest that an archipelago-type (Indonesian) model is more viable. Some diagnostic features of ridge–trench interaction are present in the Central Asian orogen (e.g. granites, adakites, boninites, near-trench magmatism, Alaskan-type mafic–ultramafic complexes, high-temperature metamorphic belts that prograde rapidly from low-grade belts, rhyolitic ash-fall tuffs). They offer a promising perspective for future investigations.

2,662 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a digital model of the age, spreading rate, and asymmetry at each grid node by linear interpolation between adjacent seafloor isochrons in the direction of spreading.
Abstract: We present four companion digital models of the age, age uncertainty, spreading rates, and spreading asymmetries of the world's ocean basins as geographic and Mercator grids with 2 arc min resolution. The grids include data from all the major ocean basins as well as detailed reconstructions of back-arc basins. The age, spreading rate, and asymmetry at each grid node are determined by linear interpolation between adjacent seafloor isochrons in the direction of spreading. Ages for ocean floor between the oldest identified magnetic anomalies and continental crust are interpolated by geological estimates of the ages of passive continental margin segments. The age uncertainties for grid cells coinciding with marine magnetic anomaly identifications, observed or rotated to their conjugate ridge flanks, are based on the difference between gridded age and observed age. The uncertainties are also a function of the distance of a given grid cell to the nearest age observation and the proximity to fracture zones or other age discontinuities. Asymmetries in crustal accretion appear to be frequently related to asthenospheric flow from mantle plumes to spreading ridges, resulting in ridge jumps toward hot spots. We also use the new age grid to compute global residual basement depth grids from the difference between observed oceanic basement depth and predicted depth using three alternative age-depth relationships. The new set of grids helps to investigate prominent negative depth anomalies, which may be alternatively related to subducted slab material descending in the mantle or to asthenospheric flow. A combination of our digital grids and the associated relative and absolute plate motion model with seismic tomography and mantle convection model outputs represents a valuable set of tools to investigate geodynamic problems.

1,731 citations