Paleomagnetism of Late Proterozoic rocks, Victoria Island, Northwest Territories, Canada

1983 ◽  
Vol 20 (9) ◽  
pp. 1456-1469 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. C. Palmer ◽  
W. R. A. Baragar ◽  
M. Fortier ◽  
J. H. Foster

Late Proterozoic Natkusiak plateau basalts and associated dolerite dikes and sills of Victoria Island show paleomagnetic polarities that relate them to the Franklin diabases but are complicated by the effects of a downward component that cannot be wholly removed in all sites by AF and thermal demagnetization. In a preserved thickness of about 740 m of Natkusiak flows the polarity changes upward in roughly successive thirds of the section from east and slightly downward (reverse), to west and slightly downward (normal), to east and slightly upward (reverse). Thus there is a double reversal in the section but the lower reverse direction is badly contaminated by a downward directed overprint. At three sites this steep downward component persists after cleaning. Dolerite polarities, except for one that is normal, cluster in the east-down (reverse) direction close to the lower reverse direction of the lavas and steeply downward, similar to the overprint direction in the flows. The downward component can be correlated with evidence of low initial oxidation and more severe alteration in the corresponding samples and may be related to burial metamorphism. The reverse direction of the upper lavas, being from the freshest parts of the section and closest in direction to the exact reversals recorded in Franklin dikes from Baffin Island, is believed to be most reliable. Paleopole positions are: upper reverse lavas, 161°E, 2°N; middle normal lavas, 159°E, 9°N; combined middle–upper lavas, 159°E, 6°N (δp = 4°, δm = 8°).Reynolds Point shales from the Shaler Group underlying Natkusiak basalts and host to the dolerite sills yielded a paleopole position at 147°E, 6°S, significantly removed from the Franklin poles but probably not indicative of an age greater than Hadrynian.

1963 ◽  
Vol 8 (15) ◽  
pp. 134
Author(s):  
George Falconer

1981 ◽  
Vol 18 (10) ◽  
pp. 1572-1580 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. K. Park

A paleomagnetic study was conducted on a regionally extensive diabase sill intruding the upper part of the Helikian (?) Tsezotene Formation located in the Mackenzie Mountains Supergroup of northwestern Canada. Twelve sites, one from a lower sill at one locality, were sampled over a distance of about 200 km. Two general magnetizations presumably carried by maghemite (AR: 38 specimens; 272°, 00°; pole 139°E, 01°N; K = 34, A95 = 4°) and hematite (B: 18 specimens; 269°, −01°; pole 141°E, 01°S; K = 21, A95 = 7°) were resolved by using a two-stage treatment method (alternating field treatment of 20–45 mT followed by thermal demagnetization to about 650 °C) in combination with vector subtraction and vector diagrams. B has normal (BN: 6 specimens) and reverse (BR: 17 specimens) components. Another magnetization (RM: 30 specimens; 086°, + 55°; k = 3) carried by magnetite appears to be a resultant of normal and reverse components, though it may include a secondary Cretaceous component. It is likely that the maghemite and hematite are deuteric alteration products of the magnetite and that they retain the primary direction probably residing in the unresolved magnetite components of RM.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
J H Bédard ◽  
R H Rainbird ◽  
L D Currie ◽  
E C Turner

1976 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 555-562 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. E. Evans ◽  
D. K. Bingham

The Tochatwi Formation comprises some 800 m of fine-grained red to buff sandstone in the upper part of the Great Slave Supergroup. Recent geological work indicates an age of 1700 m.y., but this is not yet known with certainty. Results from 29 sampling sites stratigraphically covering the Tochatwi Formation are presented. Standard paleomagnetic techniques indicate that post-folding remagnetization is common, and this is confirmed by analysis of the magnetic vectors removed as partial thermal demagnetization proceeds. Two phases of remagnetization are recognized, one of which can be attributed to nearby Mackenzie-age intrusions. The other phase is equivalent to a remagnetization observed by other workers in Kahochella Group strata at localities 70 km away. As yet, the source of this remagnetization event cannot be identified. Eight sampling sites have escaped total remagnetization and an earlier, pre-folding remanence has been isolated from these (D = 030, I = −11, k = 14, α95 = 15°). The corresponding pole position (144W, 18S) is remote from those deduced from North American rocks of similar age, and possible explanations of this problem are discussed.


1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 262-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
David R. Sharpe

An analysis of glacial landforms on a regional scale leads to an interpretation of the dynamics of Late Wisconsinan glaciation on Wollaston Peninsula, Victoria Island, Northwest Territories. The glacial record is dominated by four adjacent belts of landforms: (I) ground moraine (till plains and ice-marginal drainage features), (II) hummocky moraine, (III) lateral and shear moraine, and (IV) streamlined landforms. The landform belts are considered as representing four distinct glacial ice conditions or regimes: (1) ice-margin retreat during extending flow of thin, active ice; (2) marginal ice stagnation following compressional flow; (3) a surging ice margin producing massive shear moraines; and (4) large-scale flooding and mass ice stagnation following a surge. These landform belts were arranged in zones by topographically controlled glacial dynamics, the latter two defining a former ice stream.Glaciological inferences can be extended by examining the sediments and processes that produced each landform set. Ground-moraine sediments were produced mainly subglacially from melt out or lodgment of glacial debris. Hummocky moraine resulted from debris flow and meltwater deposition controlled by ice, from resedimentation by sediment gravity flow, and from slump. Compressional shearing stacked thick deposits of drift prior to resedimentation. Simple lateral or end moraines may comprise interbedded sediment gravity flows deposited at static ice margins. Deformed lateral moraines resulted from intense marginal compressive flow that sheared and stacked thick, coarse sediment ridges or plates. This lateral shearing may be attributed to streaming or large ice surges. Drumlin exposures showed undeformed, interbedded, stratified sediments that appear to have accumulated in a subglacial cavity; there is no deformation related to high subglacial stress. Subglacial meltwater floods may have followed glacier surge. The greatly extended and thinner ice mass produced by the surge melted in place as clean (debris-free) ice.


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