Stratigraphy and U – Pb zircon geochronology of Kidd Creek: implications for the formation of giant volcanogenic massive sulphide deposits and the tectonic history of the Abitibi greenstone belt

1996 ◽  
Vol 33 (8) ◽  
pp. 1213-1231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wouter Bleeker ◽  
Randall R. Parrish

Within the context of a structural–stratigraphic analysis of the giant Kidd Creek Cu–Zn–Ag deposit, precise U–Pb zircon ages have been obtained for five critical rock units associated with the deposit. Massive, flow-banded footwall rhyolite is dated at 2714.3 ± 1.2 Ma, slightly younger than a previously published age of 2717 ± 2 Ma on nearby rhyolite breccia. Extrusive rhyolite in the immediate hanging wall to the main ore lenses is dated at 2711.5 ± 1.2 Ma, leaving an interval of one to several million years for the formation of the deposit. We consider the demonstrated longevity of the Kidd Creek hydrothermal system as a major control on its giant size. Age constraints together with the size of the deposit suggest a time-averaged rate of base-metal sulphide deposition of about 10–100 t/year. Peak rates were likely one to possibly two orders of magnitude above time-averaged rates, hence 100–1000 t/year or higher. Detrital zircon ages on greywackes in the structural footwall to the deposit support structural observations that the metasediments are unrelated and significantly younger than the volcanics that host the deposit. All greywackes near Kidd Creek are younger than 2699 Ma and should be included in the Porcupine Group, which is redefined to include "Keewatin-age" greywacke turbidites that overlie the Krist Fragmental unit, but are themselves overlain by polymict conglomerates at the base of the Timiskaming sequence. The Prosser Porphyry, a quartz–plagioclase-porphyritic granitoid stock northeast of Kidd Creek, is dated at [Formula: see text] Ma, supporting structural observations that it is not a synvolcanic intrusion.

2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (5) ◽  
pp. 512-528 ◽  
Author(s):  
John A. Percival ◽  
William J. Davis ◽  
Michael A. Hamilton

Paleoproterozoic metasedimentary successions of the northwestern Canadian Shield provide records of tectonic events, but the definition of depositional ages has proved elusive. Although previously poorly understood, the Montresor belt of western Nunavut yields new insight into the 2.2–1.8 Ga time window. On the basis of U–Pb analyses of detrital zircon in sedimentary rocks and igneous zircon in sills, we conclude that arenite of the lower Montresor group was deposited between 2.194 and 2.045 Ga, and arkose of the upper Montresor group after 1.924 Ga, adding constraints on the Rae cover sequence. The lower Montresor arenite yielded an older group (3.05–2.58 Ga) and a younger, more tightly constrained group (2.194 ± 0.014 Ga). Four of six zircon grains analyzed from a gabbro sill within the lower Montresor have discordant 207Pb/206Pb ages (2.71, 2.66, 2.53, and 2.39 Ga) and are considered to be inherited, whereas two grains provide an age of 2045 ± 13 Ma, interpreted to date crystallization and providing a minimum age for the lower Montresor package. Upper Montresor arkose contains detrital zircon with probability density peaks at 2.55–2.25 and 2.1–1.92 Ga, together with scattered older grains (3.8–2.65 Ga). The youngest grain yields an age of 1924 ± 6 Ma, establishing a maximum age for sandstone deposition. Provenance is inferred to have been from the west, where igneous sources of 2.5–2.3 Ga (Queen Maud block) and 2.03–1.89 Ga (Thelon orogen) are known. Collectively, the new ages suggest a minimum 120 million year gap between deposition of the pre-2045 ± 13 Ma lower and post-1924 ± 6 Ma upper parts of the Montresor group. Similar age constraints may apply to other parts of the Rae cover sequence.


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