scholarly journals Jurassic stratigraphy of the Diagonal Mountain area, Mcconnell Creek map area, north-central British Columbia

1993 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Jakobs
1986 ◽  
Vol 23 (12) ◽  
pp. 1963-1973 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert C. Thomson ◽  
Paul L. Smith ◽  
Howard W. Tipper

The Lower to Middle Jurassic (Pliensbachian to lower Bajocian) Spatsizi Group in the northern Spatsizi area of north-central British Columbia is formally defined and subdivided into the Joan, Wolf Den, Melisson, Abou, and Quock formations. Each formation reflects deposition in a different, dominantly fine-clastic environment with a varying input of volcanic (epiclastic or pyroclastic) detritus. The Spatsizi Group represents the basinward sedimentary equivalent of the coeval Cold Fish Volcanics, a group of calc-alkaline flows and breccias that accumulated in a volcanic arc along the southern flank of the Stikine Arch. Arc-to basin-facies trends are best developed in the Joan and Wolf Den formations and are characterized by a decrease in the volcaniclastic component of the sediments, an overall reduction in grain size, and a progressively deeper water environment of deposition, as inferred from both sedimentological and faunal evidence.In the study area, the Spatsizi Group underlies with a slight angular discordance the Middle to Upper Jurassic Bowser Lake Group. Bowser lake sediments were deposited in the Bowser Basin, the largest Mesozoic successor basin in British Columbia. Based on evidence from the Spatsizi area and from other areas to the south at Diagonal Mountain and the Oweegee Mountains, the Spatsizi Group is interpreted as passing laterally into shales that underlie most of the Bowser Basin.


1979 ◽  
Vol 16 (7) ◽  
pp. 1428-1438 ◽  
Author(s):  
Randall R. Parrish

The Wolverine Complex is a metamorphosed and polydeformed sequence of Hadrynian clastic rocks that forms part of the Omineca Crystalline Belt in north-central British Columbia. Twenty-six Rb–Sr and K–Ar dates from an area at the north end of the complex are presented. Rb–Sr muscovite dates are the oldest, 70–166 Ma, and constrain the main metamorphic–deformational event to the Middle to Late Jurassic or earlier. K–Ar dates on muscovite and biotite are highly discordant and the dates of the minerals vary in the order Rb–Sr muscovite > K–Ar muscovite > K–Ar biotite. Many rocks show partial or complete homogenization of the isotopes during an early Tertiary thermal event, which has extensively reset K–Ar dates in part of the complex.The blocking temperatures of the isotopic systems when combined with the isotopic dates, other published dates, and estimated geothermal gradients, allow inference of thermal history and paleo-uplift rates. In the Chase Mountain area where the influence of Eocene resetting is either small or minimal, the rocks had cooled to 220 ± 40 °C by about 80 Ma ago or earlier. During their cooling from metamorphic temperatures of about 500 °C, they cooled at rates between 3 and 10 °C/Ma with an average minimum cooling rate of 4 °C/Ma. Using estimated geothermal gradients, corresponding uplift rates were 0.1–0.3 km/Ma or more.Because cooling of these rocks probably took place dominantly by advection resulting from uplift and erosion, a significant portion of the total uplift of these rocks was complete by the time they reached the biotite blocking temperature, 220 °C, at least 80 Ma ago. The predominantly Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous uplift of the complex implied by these dates has important implications for regional tectonics and models of evolution for the Omineca Crystalline Belt and adjacent areas.


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