Ancient Suture Zones Within Continents
- 3 July 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 213 (4503) , 41-46
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.213.4503.41
Abstract
Ancient suture belts within continents are deformed regions which contain the remnants of former ocean basins. They form when two continents or island arcs that earlier were separated by an ocean basin converge and collide during plate tectonic activity. These belts provide the only record we have of deep oceanic crust and of ancient sea-floor processes for the first 94 percent of the earth's history, that is, prior to the oldest preserved crust in the oceans. Ten criteria for the recognition and interpretation of these ancient belts are discussed. A comprehensive program for the study of these belts should have great scientific and economic benefit for the United States and would be relatively cheap compared to other large national scientific efforts.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- World distribution of sutures — the sites of former oceansPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- The Bogota Peninsula, New Caledonia: A Possible Oceanic Transform FaultThe Journal of Geology, 1980
- Paleopoles and paleolatitudes of North America and speculations about displaced terrainsCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1979
- Intraplate seismicity, reactivation of preexisting zones of weakness, alkaline magmatism, and other tectonism postdating continental fragmentationReviews of Geophysics, 1978
- Geology and Rb-Sr Chronology of Middle Precambrian Rocks in Eastern and Central WisconsinGSA Bulletin, 1975
- Geotectonic significance of ultramafic rocksEarth-Science Reviews, 1973
- Interpretative Synthesis of Metamorphism in the AlpsGSA Bulletin, 1973
- Occurrence and mineralogic evolution of blueschist belts with timeAmerican Journal of Science, 1972
- Evidence for plate-tectonic regimes in the rock recordAmerican Journal of Science, 1972
- Plate Tectonics and Shallow Marine Diversity and Endemism, an Actualistic ModelSystematic Zoology, 1971