Data from: Influence of magmatism on the architecture of transpressional faults and shear zones in the deep crust of the Late Cretaceous Southern California batholith
Data files
Feb 04, 2026 version files 389.13 KB
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README.md
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Supplementary_Table_1_U-Pb_zircon_FINAL.xlsx
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Abstract
Structural analyses combined with U‐Pb zircon petrochronology show the influence of arc magmatism on the evolution of two transpressional shear zones in the deep root of the Late Cretaceous Southern California batholith. The mid-crustal Black Belt and lower-crustal Cucamonga shear zones (eastern San Gabriel Mountains) formed at ~84 Ma shortly after a large mass of tonalite and granodiorite intruded the lower crust. Both shear zones were active until at least ~74 Ma and probably until 72-70 Ma. In the mid-crustal shear zone, rheological contrasts between mingling magmas localized deformation at dike margins. The deformation began as hypersolidus flow in partially crystallized dikes and then transitioned to deformation below the solidus when alternations between viscous creep and brittle faulting produced interlayered pseudotachylyte, cataclasite, and mylonite. As the dikes solidified, strain hardening drove shear zone growth and created thin (10-30 m) high-strain zones and faults that are widely spaced across ~1 km. In contrast, the lower-crustal Cucamonga shear zone was magma-starved, lacks the variety of shear zone fabrics exhibited by its mid-crustal counterpart, and formed by the reactivation of a pre-existing fabric that records pure reverse displacements at 124-93 Ma. The two shear zones created a partitioned style of intra-arc transpression where sinistral-reverse (mostly arc-parallel with some arc-oblique) displacements were accommodated on moderately dipping faults and shear zones and arc-normal shortening was accommodated by coeval folds. This study shows how a magmatic surge influenced the architecture and style of Late Cretaceous transpression in the Southern California batholith, including the evolution of high-strain zones that record alternating episodes of brittle, ductile, and hypersolidus deformation. The results illustrate how magmatism localizes strain on deep-crustal faults during orogenesis and oblique convergence.
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.jh9w0vtn6
Description of the data and file structure
All isotopic, geochemical, and trace element data were collected as part of a study to determine the timing of magmatism, metamorphism, and deformation in the Black Belt and Cucamonga shear zones in the southeastern San Gabriel Mountains in Southern California. Some zircons exhibited interior core and rim domains that reflect a history of deformation and metamorphism at amphibolite- to granulite-facies conditions. Where possible, we used zircon trace-element concentrations and ratios, particularly U (ppm), U/Th, Gd/Yb, and Dy/Yb, to distinguish metamorphic age populations. For more information on methods and an interpretation of the data, please see the publication in the journal GSA Bulletin by Klepeis et al. (2025).
Files and variables
File: Supplementary_Table_1_U-Pb_zircon_FINAL.xlsx
Description: The table in the data sheet tab titled 'Table 1. U-Pb data unknowns' presents all U-Pb isotope data for the 11 samples analyzed plus the standards used. All standards are listed at the bottom of the table. The zircon standards include: Plesovice(Ples), which is used as a zircon U-Pb age standard; 91500, which is a primary zircon reference standard used for age normalization and reproducibility; Australian zircon suite (AusZ), which is a zircon age standard that is used as a secondary check on accuracy; GJ-1 zircon (GJ), which is a widely used zircon standard, the Malinau/Malim zircon suite (Mali) which is an additional age validation standard. Trace element standards include NIST 612 (N612), which is a synthetic silicate glass standard (see more information below), and BHVO, which is a natural basalt reference standard (see more information below).
In the 'Table 1. U-Pb data unknowns' tab, n/a means not applicable. This refers to the lack of best ages and absolute error calculations for the standards N612 and BVHO. This information isn't applicable because these are non-zircon trace element standards, so no age is calculated. In contrast, the zircon standards (91500, AusZ, GJ, Mali, Plesovice) all have well-known ages, so best age and absolute error calculations are included.
In the Table 1 data tab, n.d. means not detected.
Only 1 average value and a standard deviation for the trace element analyses are provided for each sample in columns AP and AQ, respectively (the rest of the cells are blank).
The tab titled 'NIST 612' shows data that used the widely used synthetic glass standard from the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology. The standard is commonly analyzed to calibrate trace-element concentrations during LA-ICP-MS work. The tab titled 'BHVO' reports data from a well-characterized natural basalt reference material (from Hawaii). This is used as a secondary standard to monitor analytical accuracy and precision.
In the BHVO data tab, n.d. means not detected.
Isotopic ratios and Apparent ages are not corrected for common lead. For the 206Pb/238U ages, common lead was corrected by inferring the initial Pb-composition from the Stacey and Kramers (1975) two stage isotope evolution model (Vermeesch, 2018). Analyses with greater than 10% uncertainty in 207Pb/206Pb age (1-sigma) or 5% uncertainty in 206Pb/238U age (1-sigma), 20% discordance, and/or 5% reverse discordance are excluded. Accepted ages were calculated by using 206Pb/238U ages for grains younger than 1100 Ma and 207Pb/206Pb ages for grains older than 1100 Ma.
Variables
- U, U/Th, 238U/206U, 207Pb/206Pb, 207Pb/206Pb vs 238U/206Pb isotopic ratios, apparent ages and absolute errors.
- Trace-element data for P, Ti, V, Y, Zr, Nb, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu, Hf, Ta
Abbreviations include: ppm is parts per million, abs is absolute, Ma is millions of years, abs err is absolute error, error corr is error correction.
Code/software
Uncertainties were calculated using Iolite and IsoplotR (Paton et al., 2010; Vermeesch, 2018)
We conducted U-Pb analyses on 11 zircon-bearing samples to determine the timing of magmatism, metamorphism, and deformation in the Black Belt and Cucamonga shear zones. Some zircons exhibited interior core and rim domains that reflect a history of deformation and metamorphism at amphibolite- to granulite-facies conditions.
The methods used in this study closely follow those outlined in Kylander-Clark et al. (2013) and are described in detail by Schwartz et al. (2024b). U-Pb ratios were collected at the University of California, Santa Barbara using a Nu Plasma multi-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (MC-ICPMS) with a Photon Machines 193 ArF excimer laser with HelEx cell. Spot size and frequency were 35 µm and 4 Hz, respectively. The primary standard (91500) was accessed every 10 analyses to correct for in-run fractionation of Pb/U and Pb isotopes. A secondary standard (Temora-2) was analyzed every ~10 analyses to assess data reproducibility. Uncertainties are reported as 2SE internal calculated from Iolite and IsoplotR (Paton et al., 2010; Vermeesch, 2018). We assigned a 2% uncertainty to all dates for interlab comparisons to account for the reproducibility of standards.
Zircon ages are reported using the 206Pb/238U date for analyses <1100 Ma, and the 207Pb/206Pb date for those >1100 Ma. For the former, discordance is calculated as the percent difference between the 207Pb/235U and 206Pb/238U dates. Corrections for minor amounts of common Pb in zircon were made on 206Pb/238U dates following the methods of Tera and Wasserburg (1972) using measured 207Pb/206Pb and 238U/206Pb ratios and an age-appropriate Pb isotopic composition of Stacey and Kramers (1975). Zircons with large common Pb corrections (e.g., analyses interpreted as having ~20% or greater contribution from common Pb) were discarded. No corrections were made on 207Pb/206Pb dates due to large uncertainties in measured 204Pb.
Cathodoluminescence images were obtained using a FEI Quanta scanning electron microscope before and after ablation to evaluate analyzed areas and compare them with growth textures. Where possible, we targeted all growth domains and report 207Pb/206Pb-corrected 206Pb/238U ages of texturally homogeneous populations. In a few cases where a laser spots overlapped multiple domains we report the data in tables but did not considered them in weighted mean calculations. Concordia plots and error-weighted average ages are shown in the accompanying journal article.
Trace elements were measured simultaneously with U-Pb isotopes by LA-SF-ICPMS using Zr as the internal standard and nominal values of 43.14 % Zr. Trace element data were reduced using Iolite (Paton et al., 2010, 2011) and concentrations calculated relative to NIST-612 as a primary standard. BHVO-2G was analyzed as a secondary standard to assess reproducibility of the data. For zircon, model Ti-in-zircon temperatures were calculated using the Ferry and Watson (Ferry and Watson, 2007) calibration. Samples of granulite-facies rocks from the Cucamonga terrane contain rutile, allowing us to estimate the activity of TiO2 to be one. For samples that lack rutile we assume a value of 0.6 based on the presence of ilmenite.
