Mesozoic alkaline rocks of the Averill plutonic complex

1992 ◽  
Vol 29 (11) ◽  
pp. 2508-2520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Myra Keep ◽  
J. K. Russell

The 150 Ma Averill alkaline plutonic complex is situated in southern British Columbia within the Intermontane Belt of the Canadian Cordillera. It comprises concentrically arranged phases of pyroxenite, monzogabbro, monzodiorite, monzonite, and syenite. Gradational changes in the modal composition of the phases contrast with an abrupt change in crystallinity from euhedral mafic minerals in the ultramafic–mafic phases to an anhedral, interstitial habit for mafic minerals in the syenite. Whole-rock compositions have clear alkaline affinities (e.g., feldspathoid normative) and indicate a chemical discontinuity between the ultramafic–mafic phases and the late syenite phases. Melanite garnet is an important accessory mineral of the syenite and is characteristic of silica-undersaturated alkaline intrusions. Clinopyroxene, feldspar, amphibole, biotite, melanite, and titanite compositions compare closely with those of other alkaline complexes in the western Cordillera.

1985 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 584-598 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Irving ◽  
G. J. Woodsworth ◽  
P. J. Wynne ◽  
A. Morrison

The mid-Cretaceous Spuzzum and Porteau plutons of the Coast Plutonic Complex of British Columbia have two magnetizations, A and B. The A magnetization (eight sites, 83 specimens, D = 30.3°, I = 56.7°, α95 = 4.9°, paleolatitude = 37 ± 5°N, paleopole 65.0°N, 14.9°W, A95 = 6.2°) is considered to have been acquired in the age range 105–90 Ma. This result differs from the field established for cratonic North America in this time range. The difference could be caused either by previously undetected tilting about a horizontal axis of the plutons, or by their rotation about a vertical axis and lateral displacement relative to the craton. Previously observed mid-Cretaceous magnetizations from other rock units from the western Canadian Cordillera and the Cascades of Washington, United States, are similarly discordant with respect to the craton. This similarity over such a large area indicates that, although local undetected tilting could be partly responsible, it is unlikely to be the prime cause, and we argue therefore that lateral displacement and rotation have occurred. It would seem that much of the western part of the Canadian Cordillera has moved north by about 2400 km and rotated clockwise since the mid-Cretaceous. The paleolatitude of the southern Coast Plutonic Complex of British Columbia is statistically identical to that recently observed (39 ± 3°N) for three plutons from the Central Sierra Nevada of California, which raises the possibility that the two complexes were much closer together at the time of their emplacement than at present. The second magnetization called B (four sites, 27 specimens, D = 5.1°, I = 67.6°, α95 = 4.7°, paleopole 86.5°N, 51.2°W) is parallel to the mid-Tertiary field, as previously determined from nearby intrusions, and is considered to be an overprint acquired during regional heating and low-grade metasomatism. Some earlier paleomagnetic studies of mid-Cretaceous rocks from the Coast Plutonic Complex indicated either an absence of displacement or uncertain evidence for it, and we attribute this to the nonrecognition, in this earlier work, of similar magnetically stable overprints of Tertiary age. Overprints in several Triassic rock units in the western Cordillera are parallel to the A magnetization, indicating that the mid-Cretaceous and the mid-Tertiary probably were periods of severe magnetic overprinting in British Columbia. Mid-Cretaceous and Late Triassic results from the western Cordillera of British Columbia are systematically different, indicating that movements relative to the craton occurred between these times.


1979 ◽  
Vol 16 (10) ◽  
pp. 1988-1997 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregg W. Morrison ◽  
Colin I. Godwin ◽  
Richard L. Armstrong

Sixteen new K–Ar dates and four new Rb–Sr isochrons help define four plutonic suites in the Whitehorse map area, Yukon. The Triassic(?) suite, defined on stratigraphic evidence, is the southern extension of the Yukon Crystalline Terrane and is correlative with plutonic suites in the Intermontane Belt in British Columbia. The mid-Cretaceous (~100 Ma) suite in the Intermontane Belt in the Whitehorse map area is time equivalent to plutonic suites in the Omineca Crystalline Belt to the east. Late Cretaceous (~70 Ma) and Eocene (~55 Ma) suites include volcanic and subvolcanic as well as plutonic phases and are correlative with continental volcano–plutonic suites near the eastern margin of the Coast Plutonic Complex. The predominance of the mid-Cretaceous suite in the Intermontane Belt in Whitehorse and adjacent map areas in Yukon and northern British Columbia suggests that this area has undergone posttectonic magmatism more characteristic of the Omineca Crystalline Belt than of the Intermontane Belt elsewhere in the Canadian Cordillera.87Sr/86Sr initial ratio determinations suggest that the southern extension of the Yukon Crystalline Terrane in the western part of the Whitehorse map area and in northern British Columbia includes Precambrian crust separated from the North American craton by Paleozoic oceanic crust of the Intermontane Belt.


1970 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans Frebold ◽  
H. W. Tipper

Jurassic index fossils of the Canadian Cordillera indicate the presence of some zones of most Jurassic stages. In this report the more important localities are listed, the source of information, published and unpublished, is indicated, and an up-dated correlation chart is presented. The importance of tectonic events and their effect on the completeness of the Jurassic fossil record and on the Jurassic paleogeography are stressed.


2009 ◽  
Vol 121 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 1362-1380 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Brian Mahoney ◽  
Sarah M. Gordee ◽  
James W. Haggart ◽  
Richard M. Friedman ◽  
Larry J. Diakow ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 49 (7) ◽  
pp. 796-817 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.H. Brown

The San Juan Islands – northwest Cascades thrust system in Washington and British Columbia is composed of previously accreted terranes now assembled as four broadly defined composite nappes stacked on a continental footwall of Wrangellia and the Coast Plutonic Complex. Emplacement ages of the nappe sequence are interpreted from zircon ages, field relations, and lithlogies, to young upward. The basal nappe was emplaced prior to early Turonian time (∼93 Ma), indicated by the occurrence of age-distinctive zircons from this nappe in the Sidney Island Formation of the Nanaimo Group. The emplacement age of the highest nappe in the thrust system postdates 87 Ma detrital zircons within the nappe. The nappes bear high-pressure – low-temperature (HP–LT) mineral assemblages indicative of deep burial in a thrust wedge; however, several features indicate that metamorphism occurred prior to nappe assembly: metamorphic discontinuities at nappe boundaries, absence of HP–LT assemblages in the footwall to the nappe pile, and absence of significant unroofing detritus in the Nanaimo Group. A synorogenic relationship of the thrust system to the Nanaimo Group is evident from mutually overlapping ages and by conglomerates of Nanaimo affinity that lie within the nappe pile. From the foregoing relations, and broader Cordilleran geology, the tectonic history of the nappe terranes is interpreted to involve initial accretion and subduction-zone metamorphism south of the present locality, uplift and exhumation, orogen-parallel northward transport of the nappes as part of a forearc sliver, and finally obduction at the present site over the truncated south end of Wrangellia and the Coast Plutonic Complex.


1995 ◽  
Vol 32 (10) ◽  
pp. 1514-1519 ◽  
Author(s):  
John F. Cassidy

Receiver function analysis has proven to be a powerful, yet inexpensive tool for estimating the S-wave velocity structure of the crust and upper mantle beneath three-component seismograph stations in the southern Canadian Cordillera. Receiver function studies using a portable broadband seismograph array across southwestern British Columbia provided site-specific estimates for the location of the subducting Juan de Fuca plate. The oceanic crust was imaged at 47−53 km beneath central Vancouver Island, and 60–65 km beneath the Strait of Georgia. Further, these studies revealed a prominent low-velocity zone (VS = −1.0 km/s) that coincides with the E reflectors imaged ~5–10 km above the subducting plate on Lithoprobe reflection lines. The E low-velocity zone was shown to extend into the upper mantle beneath the Strait of Georgia and the British Columbia mainland, to depths of 50–60 km. Combining the receiver function and refraction models revealed a high Poisson's ratio (0.27–0.38) for this feature. The continental Moho was estimated at 36 km beneath the Strait of Georgia, and a crustal low-velocity zone associated with the Lithoprobe C reflectors beneath Vancouver Island was interpreted to extend eastward, near the base of the continental crust, to the British Columbia mainland. Analysis of data from the recently deployed Canadian National Seismograph Network demonstrates the variations in crustal thickness and complexity across the southern Canadian Cordillera, with the Moho depth varying from 35 km in the Coast Mountains, to 33 km near Penticton, to 50 km near the Rocky Mountain deformation front.


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