Northeastern extension and crustal expression of terranes from Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, based on geophysical data

1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (11) ◽  
pp. 2255-2267 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. D. Loncarevic ◽  
S. M. Barr ◽  
R. P. Raeside ◽  
C. E. Keen ◽  
F. Marillier

The narrowest section of the Appalachian Orogen in Atlantic Canada (from Grenville-age basement in the west to the Avalon Terrane in the east) is preserved in Cape Breton Island, where components of four terranes display distinctive stratigraphic, igneous, metamorphic, aeromagnetic, and gravity characteristics. The Blair River Complex of northwestern Cape Breton Island is a fragment of Grenvillian rocks that is similar to units in western Newfoundland. The Aspy Terrane is characterized by mid-Paleozoic granitic rocks and high-pressure paragneisses and appears to continue across the Cabot Strait as the Gander Terrane of the Hermitage Flexure in Newfoundland. The Bras d'Or Terrane is composed of Hadrynian to Early Cambrian low-pressure metasedimentary units and dioritic to granitic plutonic rocks. As indicated by aeromagnetic anomalies, this terrane continues across the Laurentian Channel to the south coast of Newfoundland, where it may be terminated by the Hermitage Fault. The Avalon Terrane of southeastern Cape Breton Island bears many similarities to the Avalon Terrane of Newfoundland.A seismic reflection profile obtained as part of the Lithoprobe-East project shows that the Blair River Complex is juxtaposed against the Aspy Terrane by steeply dipping fault systems that cut through the entire crust and that the Bras d'Or Terrane is similarly juxtaposed with the Avalon Terrane. The nature of the boundary between the Aspy and Bras d'Or terranes is less clear, although metamorphic conditions and the seismic reflection profile both suggest that the Aspy Terrane represents a deeper crustal level, over which the Bras d'Or Terrane has been emplaced.

1990 ◽  
Vol 27 (10) ◽  
pp. 1371-1381 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert P. Raeside ◽  
Sandra M. Barr

The Bras d'Or Terrane is defined in Cape Breton Island and consists of four distinctive components, (i) Low-pressure, regionally metamorphosed aluminous and calcareous gneiss of the Proterozoic Bras d'Or metamorphic suite is restricted to the southeastern part of the terrane. (ii) Late Proterozoic clastic-volcanic-carbonate units (Blues Brook, Malagawatch, McMillan Flowage, and Benacadie Brook formations, and Barachois River and Bateman Brook metamorphic suites) occur throughout the terrane and are generally at low metamorphic grades, although sillimanite grade has locally been achieved, (iii) A suite of 555–565 Ma calc-alkalic dioritic to granitic plutons was emplaced at pressures ranging from about 900 to less than 100 MPa. (iv) Early Ordovician granitic plutonism and Ordovician 40Ar/39Ar ages record regional heating.The Bras d'Or Terrane docked with the Mira Terrane to the southeast no earlier than the Ordovician. Cambro-Ordovician sedimentary rocks of the Mira Terrane appear locally to be thrust over the Bras d'Or Terrane. Mississippian sedimentary rocks overlap both terranes. The present boundary, the Macintosh Brook Fault, is mainly a Carboniferous feature. Docking with the Aspy Terrane to the northwest occurred along the Eastern Highlands shear zone and is constrained by a 375 Ma stitching pluton, the Black Brook Granitic Suite. Docking may have been initiated as early as 415 Ma, as indicated by reset 40Ar/39Ar ages near the boundary. The three Proterozoic components of the Bras d'Or Terrane have been recognized in the Brookville Terrane of southern New Brunswick, and Late Proterozoic gneiss, Late Proterozoic – early Cambrian calc-alkalic plutons and Ordovician granitic plutons have been reported in parts of the Hermitage Flexure of southern Newfoundland. The Bras d'Or Terrane may therefore be a regionally significant component of the northern Appalachian Orogen.


Geology ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 79 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ernest H. Rutter ◽  
Jalal Khazanehdari ◽  
Katharine H. Brodie ◽  
Derek J. Blundell ◽  
David A. Waltham

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