RT Journal Article T1 Palaeomagnetism of Late Miocene to Quaternary volcanicsfrom the eastern segment of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt A1 Ruiz Martínez, Vicente Carlos A1 Osete López, María Luisa A1 Vegas Martínez, Ramón A1 Núñez Aguilar, Juan Ignacio A1 Urrutia Fucugauchi, Jaime A1 Tarling, Donald H. AB A systematic palaeomagnetic study in the eastern part of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt includes 39 Miocene,Pliocene and Quaternary volcanic rocks in the southeastern Mexico Basin (Sierra Nevada and Sierra de Rı´o Frı´o),the Altiplano area, and the Palma Sola Massif. A total of 430 samples have been selectively demagnetized usingmostly alternating field demagnetizing methods, supplemented by thermal analyses. Most characteristic remanencesare carried by low-Ti titanomagnetites, with occasional titanohematites or slightly maghemitized low-Ti titanomagnetites,of similar direction. Seven sites were discarded because they presented intermediate directions, hydrothermalalteration or were remagnetized by lightning strikes. The mean directions of 32 sites, together with 24 sites fromSierra de las Cruces in the western Mexico basin, indicate rocks older than 2 Ma are rotated some 10° counterclockwisewith respect to Quaternary rocks, whereas there is no rotational difference between Miocene and Pliocene rocks.Statistical analyses between different regrouped populations confirm that the rotational pattern is due to the age ofthe volcanics rocks but not to their spatial distribution. The Quaternary mean direction from the three Mexico Basinranges is consistent with the geographical reference pole. In contrast, the Pliocene mean direction from volcanic rocksof the Altiplano area and the Sierra de Las Cruces is slightly rotated some 10° westwards with respect to the referencedirection from North America. No significant rotations have been observed in the eastern TMVB (from the westernMexico Basin to the border of the Altiplano), between late Miocene and late Pliocene times. It suggests that a verysmall, counterclockwise vertical-axis rotation may have been taken place in this segment of the TMVB between latePliocene and Quaternary times. Comparisons of these results with a summary of the available palaeomagnetic datain the area indicate that the previously reported Quaternary rotations are of questionable reliability, and that thelarge counterclockwise rotations, reported in Cretaceous to Miocene rocks, probably took place before the lateMiocene. These new palaeomagnetic data support the idea that the eastern TMVB since the late Miocene, has beena zone of extension with a little, left-lateral shear component. PB Elsevier, B.V. SN 0040-1951 YR 2000 FD 2000 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/57608 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/57608 LA eng DS Docta Complutense RD 13 abr 2025