An investigation of Superior Shoal, central Lake Superior, with a manned submersible

1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew L. Manson ◽  
Henry C. Halls

A Johnson-Sea-Link submersible was used to examine the geology of Superior Shoal in central Lake Superior. Here, glacially scoured, vertical cliffs, some more than 100 m high, are formed of 1.1 Ga middle Keweenawan basaltic lava flows displaying ophitic interiors and red amygdaloidal tops. Flat-lying sandstones, lithologically similar to the upper Keweenawan Bayfield–Jacobsville sequences, occur to the north of the volcanic rocks. These are inferred to have been downthrown along an eastward extension of the Isle Royale fault, a major boundary fault of the Midcontinent rift. The volcanic rocks are normally magnetized, supporting lithological evidence that they correlate with the middle Keweenawan sequence on Isle Royale. Paleomagnetic data suggest that the volcanics have a complex structure, possibly involving drag folding along the Isle Royale fault.

1990 ◽  
Vol 27 (9) ◽  
pp. 1194-1199 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth W. Klewin ◽  
Jonathan H. Berg

The Keweenawan (1100 Ma) Mamainse Point volcanics, located along the eastern shore of Lake Superior in Ontario, formed in the Midcontinent Rift of North America. They are a 5250 m thick sequence of over 350 predominantly basaltic lava flows. The Mamainse Point section is the most continuous Keweenawan volcanic sequence and spans nearly the entire igneous history of the rift. The lower part of the section consists of high-MgO picrites and basalts, but the upper part of the section is composed of olivine tholeiites intercalated with numerous conglomerate layers. Major- and trace-element data reveal that the section consists of numerous stratigraphically constrained, geochemically distinct groups of lava flows. The comprehensive geochemical data on the entire sequence indicate that the section has no repetition due to faulting, as has been suggested by other workers on the basis of paleomagnetic studies. Evidently, the three paleomagnetic reversals previously found in the Mamainse Point section are real, and therefore there were multiple paleomagnetic reversals during Keweenawan time.


1994 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 640-651 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew L. Manson ◽  
Henry C. Halls

GLIMPCE aeromagnetic data in eastern Lake Superior are characterized by a series of strong easterly- and northeasterly-oriented gradients that relate to mapped post-Keweenawan faults occurring along the eastern shore. The reversed nature of three of the faults is established through field observations and potential field modelling. Middle Keweenawan volcanic rocks at Mamainse Point are in fault contact on their south side with upper Keweenawan sandstone of Bayfield–Jacobsville type. Gravity modelling suggests that the fault is a low angle thrust dipping to the north. Field observations and high-resolution aeromagnetic data show that it extends inland along the southern margin of the Batchawana Greenstone Belt for at least 17 km. To the west, the Mamainse Point fault may extend across eastern Lake Superior to the Keweenaw Peninsula, linking several offsets in the seismic data that are consistent with the same attitude and sense of displacement. Along the south side of Batchawana Bay at Havilland, sandstones of Bayfield–Jacobsville type are isoclinally folded against a package of upthrust older rocks that include drag-folded middle Keweenawan volcanics. At Grindstone Point, north of Cape Gargantua, a reverse fault separating isoclinally-folded upper Keweenawan sandstones from Archean basement may, on aeromagnetic evidence, be an eastward extension of the Michipicoten Island fault.These faults mark a significant change in the style of late compressional tectonism observed within the Midcontinent Rift. All cut Keweenawan rocks across strike. The inference is that broad north–south or northwest–southeast compression, consistent in timing and orientation with the Grenville Orogeny, led to a reversal of movement along the major graben faults in western Lake Superior and was taken up in the eastern region by reverse faults oriented normal to the extensional axis of the rift.


Tectonics ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 305-332 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. F. Cannon ◽  
Alan G. Green ◽  
D. R. Hutchinson ◽  
Myung Lee ◽  
Bernd Milkereit ◽  
...  

1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 476-488 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. W. Davis ◽  
J. C. Green

Volcanism in the Midcontinent rift system lasted between 1108 and 1086 Ma. Rates of flood-basalt eruption and subsidence in the western Lake Superior region appear to have been greatest at the beginning of recorded activity (estimated 5 km/Ma subsidence rate at 1108 Ma) and rapidly waned over a period of 1–3 Ma during a magnetically reversed period. The age of the paleomagnetic polarity reversal is now constrained to be between 1105 ± 2 and 1102 ± 2 Ma. A resurgence of intense volcanism began at 1100 ± 2 Ma in the North Shore Volcanic Group and lasted until 1097 ± 2 Ma. This group contains a ca. 7 Ma time gap between magnetically reversed and normal volcanic sequences. A similar disconformity appears to exist in the upper part of the Powder Mill Group. The average subsidence rate during this period was approximately 3.7 km/Ma. Latitude variations measured from paleomagnetism on dated sequences indicate that the North American plate was drifting at a minimum rate of 22 cm/year during the early history of the Midcontinent rift. An abrupt slowdown to approximately 8 cm/year occurred at ca. 1095 Ma. These data support a mantle-plume origin for Midcontinent rift volcanism, with the plume head attached to and drifting with the continental lithosphere. Resurgence of flood-basalt magmatism at 1100 Ma may have been caused by extension of the superheated lithosphere following continental collision within the Grenville Orogen to the east.


2007 ◽  
Vol 144 (2) ◽  
pp. 379-392 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. KAYMAKCI ◽  
E. ALDANMAZ ◽  
C. LANGEREIS ◽  
T. L. SPELL ◽  
O. F. GURER ◽  
...  

A number of intra-continental alkaline volcanic sequences in NW Turkey were emplaced along localized extensional gaps within dextral strike-slip fault zones prior to the initiation of the North Anatolian Fault Zone. This study presents new palaeomagnetic and 40Ar–39Ar geochronological results from the lava flows of NW Turkey as a contribution towards understanding the Neogene–Quaternary tectonic evolution of the region and possible roles of block rotations in the kinematic history of the region. 40Ar–39Ar analyses of basalt groundmass indicate that the major volume of alkaline lavas of NW Turkey spans about 4 million years of episodic volcanic activity. Palaeomagnetic results reveal clockwise rotations as high as 73° in Thrace and 33° anticlockwise rotations in the Biga Peninsula. Movement of some of the faults delimiting the areas of lava flows and the timing of volcanic eruptions are both older than the initiation age of the North Anatolian Fault Zone, implying that the region experienced transcurrent tectonics during Late Miocene to Pliocene times and that some of the presently active faults in the region are reactivated pre-existing structures.


Author(s):  
N. V. Koronovsky ◽  
M. S. Myshenkova

On the basis of new materials this article deals with the structure and origin of a huge (up to 2 km) thick massif of acidic volcanic rocks located in a volcanic-tectonic depression in the Upper Chegem River in the North Caucasus. Discussion on the lava’s, rather than pyroclastic, origin of the main part of the rock mass as a result of repeated outpourings of lava flows, which formed the series of acidic volcanic rocks without interruptions with perfectly pronounced columnar jointing in a limited volume of a deep volcanic-tectonic depression, which was forming simultaneously with eruptions in the Late Pliocene. Volcanic rocks formed as a result of boiling silicate meltas the exit from the vent, which could be due to the nature of the phase transition of the supercritical water fluid.


1994 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 652-660 ◽  
Author(s):  
John L. Sexton ◽  
Harvey Henson Jr.

The interpretation of 1047 km of seismic reflection data collected in western Lake Superior is presented along with reflection traveltime contour maps and gravity models to understand the overall geometry of the Midcontinent Rift System beneath the lake. The Douglas, Isle Royale, and Keweenaw fault zones, clearly imaged on the seismic profiles, are interpreted to be large offset detachment faults associated with initial rifting. These faults have been reactivated as reverse faults with 3–5 km of throw. The Douglas Fault Zone is not directly connected with the Isle Royale Fault Zone. The seismic data has imaged two large basins filled with more than 22 km of middle Keweenawan pre-Portage Lake and Portage Lake volcanic rocks and up to 8 km of upper Keweenawan Oronto and Bayfield sedimentary rocks. These basins persisted throughout Keweenawan time and are separated by a ridge of Archean rocks and a narrow trough bounded by the Keweenaw Fault Zone to the south. Another fault zone, herein named the Ojibwa fault zone, previously interpreted as the northeastern extension of the Douglas Fault Zone, has been reinterpreted as a reverse fault that closely follows the ridge of Archean rocks. Previous researchers have stated that neighboring segments of the rift display alternating polarity of basins associated with large detachment faults. Accommodation zones have been previously interpreted to exist between rift segments; however, the seismic data do not image a clearly identifiable accommodation zone separating the two basins in western Lake Superior. Thus, the seismic profile may lie directly above the pivot of a scissors-type accommodation fault zone, there is no vertical offset associated with the zone, or the zone does not exist. Seismic data interpretations indicate that application of a simple alternating polarity basin – accommodation zone model is an oversimplification of the complex geological structures associated with the Midcontinent Rift System.


1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 562-575 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew L. Manson ◽  
Henry C. Halls

Major reverse faults associated with the late compressional phase of the 1.1 Ga Midcontinent rift in the western Lake Superior region appear to cut across the rift at the eastern end of the lake and join with reverse faults on the eastern shoreline, defined on the basis of geological and potential field data. The continuation of the faults across eastern Lake Superior is inferred on evidence drawn from nearshore shipborne magnetic surveys together with new interpretations of published bathymetric and GLIMPCE aeromagnetic data. In the Archean Superior Province about 100 km east of Lake Superior, paleomagnetic and petrographic data from the 2.45 Ga Matachewan dyke swarm show that the Kapuskasing Zone, a narrow belt of uplifted crust, can be extended to within 50 km of the Lake Superior shoreline and has bounding reverse faults that are almost continuous with two faults of similar dip and sense of displacement that define the inversion of the Midcontinent rift in the central and western parts of the lake. Since the Kapuskasing Zone is dominantly a Paleoproterozoic (about 1.9 Ga) structure, the continuity suggests that the Lake Superior faults, whose last major activity was during the Grenville Orogen, may represent reactivation of much older faults that were part of an extended Kapuskasing structure. Within the Superior Province to the north and east of Lake Superior, published radiometric data on biotites suggest a series of alternating crustal blocks of varying tectonic stability, separated by northeast-trending faults. The Lake Superior segment of the Midcontinent rift developed within the most unstable block, bounded by the Gravel River fault to the northwest and the Ivanhoe Lake fault (the eastern margin of the Kapuskasing Zone) to the southeast.


2021 ◽  
pp. 301-352
Author(s):  
Emily B. Cahoon† ◽  
Martin J. Streck† ◽  
Mark Ferns†

ABSTRACT The Miocene Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG) is the youngest and smallest continental flood basalt province on Earth. This flood basalt province is a succession of compositionally diverse volcanic rocks that record the passage of the Yellowstone plume beneath eastern Oregon. The compositionally and texturally varied suite of volcanic rocks are considered part of the La Grande–Owyhee eruptive axis (LOEA), an ~300-km-long, north-northwest–trending, Middle Miocene to Pliocene volcanic belt that extends along the eastern margin of the Columbia River flood basalt province. Volcanic rocks erupted from and preserved within the LOEA form an important regional stratigraphic link between the flood basalt–dominated Columbia Plateau to the north, the north and bimodal basalt-rhyolite volcanic fields of the Snake River Plain to the east, the Owyhee Plateau to the south, and the High Lava Plains to the south and east; the latter two have time transgressive rhyolite centers that young to the east and west, respectively. This field-trip guide details a four-day geologic excursion that will explore the stratigraphic and geochemical relationships among mafic rocks of the CRBG and coeval and compositionally diverse silicic rocks associated with the early trace of the Yellowstone plume and High Lava Plains in eastern Oregon. The trip on Day 1 begins in Portland then traverses across the western axis of the Blue Mountains, highlighting exposures of the widespread, Middle Miocene Dinner Creek Welded Tuff and aspects of the Picture Gorge Basalt lava flows and northwest-striking feeder dikes situated in the central part of the CRBG province. Travel on Day 2 progresses eastward toward the eastern margin of the LOEA, examining a transition linking the Columbia River Basalt province with a northwestward-younging magmatic trend of silicic volcanism of the High Lava Plains in eastern Oregon. Initial field stops on Day 2 focus on the volcanic stratigraphy northeast of the town of Burns, which includes regionally extensive Middle to Late Miocene ash-flow tuffs and lava flows assigned to the Strawberry Volcanics. Subsequent stops on Day 2 examine key outcrops demonstrating the intercalated nature of Middle Miocene tholeiitic CRBG flood basalts, temporally coeval prominent ash-flow tuffs, and “Snake River–type” large-volume rhyolite lava flows cropping out along the Malheur River. The Day 3 field route navigates to southern parts of the LOEA, where CRBG rocks are associated in space and time with lesser known and more complex silicic volcanic stratigraphy forming Middle Miocene, large-volume, bimodal basalt-rhyolite vent complexes. Key stops will provide a broad overview of the structure and stratigraphy of the Middle Miocene Mahogany Mountain caldera and of the significance of intercalated sedimentary beds and Middle to Late Miocene calc-alkaline lava flows of the Owyhee basalt. Initial stops on Day 4 will highlight exposures of Middle to Late Miocene silicic ash-flow tuffs, rhyolite domes, and calc-alkaline lava flows overlying the CRBG across the northern and central parts of the LOEA. The later stops on Day 4 examine more silicic lava flows and breccias that are overlain by early CRBG-related rhyolite eruptions. The return route to Portland on Day 4 traverses the Columbia River gorge westward from Baker City. The return route between Baker and Portland on Day 4 follows the Columbia River gorge and passes prominent basalt outcrops of large volume tholeiitic flood lavas of the Grande Ronde, Wanapum, and Saddle Mountains Formations of the CRBG. These sequences of basaltic and basaltic andesite lavas are typical of the well-studied flood basalt dominated Columbia Plateau, and interbedded silicic and calc-alkaline lavas are conspicuously absent. Correlation between the far-traveled CRBG lavas and calcalkaline and silicic lavas considered during the excursion relies on geochemical fingerprinting and dating of the mafic flows and dating of sparse intercalated ashes.


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