The Gander Lake and Davidsville Groups of Northeastern Newfoundland: New Data and Geotectonic Implications

1972 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 452-459 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. Kennedy ◽  
M. H. McGonigal

Structural studies of rocks in the Gander region of Newfoundland and on the coast to the north have indicated that rocks that were previously assigned to the Middle Ordovician Gander Lake Group actually consist of a composite sequence that contains pre-Middle Ordovician polyphase deformed metasedimentary rocks and even older gneissic rocks as well as Middle Ordovician sediments and mafic volcanics. The possible implications of these results are discussed and map units in the region are redefined.

1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (7) ◽  
pp. 1503-1508
Author(s):  
John R. Montgomery ◽  
John V. Ross

The Quesnel Lake Gneiss is one of several large bodies of gneiss emplaced into the westernmost exposure of the Hadrynian to Paleozoic(?) metasedimentary rocks of the Snowshoe Group in the Omineca Belt, central British Columbia. The gneiss has a deformational history comparable to that of its enveloping rocks, and isotope studies indicate that its age of emplacement is Late Devonian to Early Mississippian and that its age of synkinematic metamorphism is mid-Jurassic. From petrochemical analyses and structural studies, we interpret the gneiss as being a late Paleozoic igneous intrusion into the probable western margin of the North American craton.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
William A. Matthews ◽  
◽  
Marie-Pier Boivin ◽  
Kirsten Sauer ◽  
Daniel S. Coutts

1986 ◽  
Vol 132 ◽  
pp. 27-37
Author(s):  
J.R Ineson ◽  
J.S Peel ◽  
M.P Smith

The name Sjælland Fjelde Formation is introduced for a varied sequence of shallow-water platform dolomites and dolomitic limestones, about 105 m in thickness, in Kronprins Christian Land, eastern North Greenland. The new formation lies between the previously described Wandel Valley and Børglum River Formations. Conodont faunas indicate that the Sjælland Fjelde Formation is of Middle to earliest Late Whiterockian (early Middle Ordovician) age and that it can be eorrelated with the upper part of the Wandel Valley Formation of Peary Land to the north-west.


2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 301 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francisco Hervé ◽  
Mauricio Calderón ◽  
Mark Fanning ◽  
Robert Pankhurst ◽  
Carlos W. Rapela ◽  
...  

Previous work has shown that Devonian magmatism in the southern Andes occurred in two contemporaneous belts: one emplaced in the continental crust of the North Patagonian Massif and the other in an oceanic island arc terrane to the west, Chaitenia, which was later accreted to Patagonia. The country rocks of the plutonic rocks consist of metasedimentary complexes which crop out sporadically in the Andes on both sides of the Argentina-Chile border, and additionally of pillow metabasalts for Chaitenia. Detrital zircon SHRIMP U-Pb age determinations in 13 samples of these rocks indicate maximum possible depositional ages from ca. 370 to 900 Ma, and the case is argued for mostly Devonian sedimentation as for the fossiliferous Buill slates. Ordovician, Cambrian-late Neoproterozoic and “Grenville-age” provenance is seen throughout, except for the most westerly outcrops where Devonian detrital zircons predominate. Besides a difference in the Precambrian zircon grains, 76% versus 25% respectively, there is no systematic variation in provenance from the Patagonian foreland to Chaitenia, so that the island arc terrane must have been proximal to the continent: its deeper crust is not exposed but several outcrops of ultramafic rocks are known. Zircons with devonian metamorphic rims in rocks from the North Patagonian Massif have no counterpart in the low metamorphic grade Chilean rocks. These Paleozoic metasedimentary rocks were also intruded by Pennsylvanian and Jurassic granitoids.


1996 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 649-655
Author(s):  
David Morin ◽  
Michel Jébrak ◽  
Robert Marquis

A subcircular positive magnetic anomaly and breccias affecting a basanite and its country-rock metasedimentary rocks reveal the presence of a diatreme with a diameter of approximately 420 m, at Eastman, in the Quebec Appalachians. The post-Middle Devonian age, the position in the line of the Monteregian plutons, and the basanite composition, which is comparable to that of the Cretaceous Monteregian alkaline lamprophyres, suggest that the diatreme is related to the Monteregian magmatism. It is located at the junction of two orthogonal tectonic corridors: the north-north-east Baie Verte – Brompton line and an east−west fault network along the prolongation of the Ottawa−Bonnechère Graben. These structures are zones of weakness that probably served as a conduit for the ascending magma and near-surface water to trigger phreatomagmatic eruptions.


1976 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 737-748 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manfred M. Kehlenbeck

In the de Courcey – Smiley Lakes Area, the boundary between the Quetico and Wabigoon Belts is expressed by a sequence of pelitic to semi-pelitic schists and gneisses. At the present level of erosion, these metasedimentary rocks are in contact with granodioritic gneisses, granites, and pegmatites, which are exposed to the south.To the north of this area, regional metamorphism of volcanic and sedimentary rocks has resulted in greenschist facies assemblages, which characterize the Wabigoon Belt in general. In the boundary zone, the metamorphic grade increases southward toward de Courcey and Smiley Lakes.Formation of three distinct foliation surfaces was accompanied by syn-tectonic as well as post-tectonic recrystallization, producing polymetamorphic schists.In the boundary zone, mineral assemblages comprising andalusile, sillimanite, cordierite, garnet. biotite, and muscovite form a facies series of the Abukuma type.The boundary between the Quetico and Wabigoon Belts in this area is a complex zone in which rocks of both belts have been reconstituted by multiple-phase metamorphism and partial melting.


2004 ◽  
Vol 175 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Baptiste Auréjac ◽  
Gérard Gleizes ◽  
Hervé Diot ◽  
Jean-Luc Bouchez

Abstract The Variscan Querigut Pluton (eastern Axial Zone, Pyrenees), recently dated at 307 ± 2 Ma, is a classical example for the structural study of granitoids. We present a new structural analysis of this pluton using the powerful technique of magnetic susceptibility anisotropy (AMS). A model of pluton emplacement is proposed on the basis of complementary microstructural analyses allowing the determination of the temperatures of fabric acquisition in the magmatic units, and of the shear sense criteria in the surrounding country rocks. This pluton is constituted by two main units that have intruded metasedimentary rocks where regional metamorphic conditions decrease from southwest to northeast. A well-foliated southern granodioritic unit, rich in Devonian marble xenoliths, is bounded to the south by Cambro-Ordovician metapelites. A weakly foliated northern monzogranitic unit, bounded to the north by Devonian marbles, comprises two sub-types : an outer biotite-monzogranite and an inner biotite-muscovite leucomonzogranite. Abundant basic stocks of variable sizes and lithologies outcrop in the granodioritic unit and in the southern part of the monzogranitic unit. Mean magnetic susceptibility and magnetic foliation maps show a very good agreement with the previous compiled petrographic and structural maps, strengthening the validity of the AMS technique. The northern monzogranitic units display two unevenly distributed structural patterns : (a) a NE-SW-trending pattern of weakly to steeply dipping foliations, dominant in the outer biotite monzogranite, is associated to subhorizontal NE-SW lineations ; and (b) a NW-SE-trending pattern of steeply dipping foliations, dominant in the inner biotite-muscovite monzogranite, is concentrated in NW-SE elongated corridors, associated to subhorizontal NW-SE lineations. In the southern granodioritic unit, foliation patterns follow roughly both the main regional foliation pattern and the pluton boundary, with foliation dips increasing to the south. Subhorizontal NW-SE trending magnetic lineations in the inner parts of this unit, are progressively verticalized toward the southern pluton boundary. A progressive increase in total magnetic anisotropy is observed toward the border of the pluton, correlated with both an increase in solid-state deformation and a decrease of the final temperature of fabric acquisition. These features result from a pluri-kilometric shear zone localized in the western half of the granodioritic unit, decreasing in thickness in its eastern half and along N060oE trending contacts with the country rocks. In the northern monzogranitic unit, one can roughly correlate the magmatic microstructures to the NE-SW trending fabric, and the superimposed subsolidus microstructures to the NW-SE-trending corridors, where rather low-temperature (< 300 oC) fluid-assisted cataclastic microstructures may also appear. The country-rocks, half kilometer away from the pluton border, display the D2 regional Variscan pattern, with subvertical and N110oE-striking foliations and subhorizontal and E-W-trending stretching lineations associated to a dextral shear. Closer to the pluton, the country-rocks are subjected to the pluton influence, particularly along the southern border where a strong flattening is associated to subvertical lineations related to local thrusting of the pluton onto its country rocks. An emplacement model is proposed through the injection of three principal magma batches (granodiorite, biotite-monzogranite and biotite-muscovite monzogranite) that successively and progressively built up the pluton while the whole region was subjected to a dextral and compressive deformation regime, in agreement with AMS results obtained from several other plutons of the Pyrenees.


1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (7) ◽  
pp. 1121-1130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel Villeneuve ◽  
Jean-Jacques Cornée

Paleogeographic reconstructions of Paleozoic time are presented for the northwest margin of the West-African Craton. An extensional regime and a marine transgression were dominant during the Early Cambrian. During the Middle Cambrian, the Rokélides orogen was responsible for the sea regression to the south, while the proto-Atlantic opening was active to the north of the Reguibat shield. A large stable marine platform was present during Early and Middle Ordovician. A general regression and the formation of the West-African Inlandsis took place during the Late Ordovician. During Silurian time, this sea transgressed over most of the African platform. Incipient Hercynian deformations during the Early Devonian produced horsts and grabens in Morocco. At the end of the Devonian and the beginning of the Carboniferous, the sea was restricted to isolated basins and tectonic trenches. Collision between West Africa and North America during the Late Carboniferous transformed the Lower Paleozoic margin into an Hercynian orogenic belt, whose structure is controlled by the presence of crustal blocks, generated as early as the Cambrian, and probably reflecting, in turn, older Panafrican zones of weakness. [Translated by the Journal]


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-25
Author(s):  
Svend Stouge ◽  
David A. T. Harper ◽  
Renbin Zhan ◽  
Jianbo Liu ◽  
Lars Stemmerik

Abstract New occurrences of middle–late Darriwilian (Middle Ordovician) conodonts are reported from the Nyalam region, southern Tibet. The conodont-yielding strata, referred to the Chiatsun Group, accumulated on the north Indian continental margin of northern Gondwana. These Middle Ordovician conodonts include the informal species Histiodella sp. A in the middle part of the Lower Formation of the Chiatsun Group succeeded by a fauna of the Pygodus serra Zone in the upper part of that formation. Pygodus anserinus is recorded from the base of the Upper Formation of the Chiatsun Group. The Nyalam succession and its conodont taxa allow for precise correlation of the strata preserved on top of Mount Qomolangma (Mount Everest), eastern Tibet and the Peri-Gondwana Lhasa (north central Tibet), South China, North China, Tarim Basin and Thailand-Malaysia (Sibumasu Terrane) terranes and/or microcontinents. The middle Darriwilian positive increase in δ13Ccarb values (carbon isotope excursion, or MDICE) is recorded from most terranes, and can be related to a late middle Darriwilian global short-term cooling and sea-level drop. The cooling event prompted temperate- to warm-water taxa to migrate towards the palaeoequator and constrained the Australasian Province to locations near and at the palaeoequator. The intensified oceanic circulation and upwelling on continental margins probably caused some characteristic taxa to become extinct. The incoming fauna was mainly of cool-water taxa. The conodont specimens from southern Tibet are black to pale grey, corresponding to conodont colour index (CAI) values of 5 to 6, which demonstrates that the host sedimentary rocks were once heated to more than 360°C.


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