scholarly journals Lower and Middle Devonian outcrop stratigraphy of northeast British Columbia

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
L M Nadjiwon ◽  
D W Morrow ◽  
A D McCracken ◽  
M Coniglio
1975 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 1760-1769 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew V. Okulitch ◽  
R. K. Wanless ◽  
W. D. Loveridge

An apparently tabular body of granitoid gneiss, 3 to 5 km wide and more than 70 km long, that lies along the western margin of the Shuswap Metamorphic Complex between Shuswap and Admas Lakes, shows intrusive relationships with Palaeozoic and older rocks and has yielded zircons whose minimum age is 372 Ma. This intrusion, together with other granitoid plutons in the area that appear to be related to it, provide evidence of widespread plutonism during Middle Devonian time near the western edge of the Paleozoic Cordillera geosyncline and necessitate significant revisions in the interpretation of the crustal history of this region.


1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (12) ◽  
pp. 1603-1618 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carmala N. Garzione ◽  
P. Jonathan Patchett ◽  
Gerald M. Ross ◽  
JoAnne Nelson

Nd isotopes and trace elements in sedimentary rocks of the Yukon, the Northwest Territories, and northern British Columbia are used to examine the source of sediments in the Canadian Cordilleran miogeocline. Previous Nd isotope studies in southern Alberta demonstrated that strata of Neoproterozoic to Late Ordovician age were derived from Archean and Proterozoic Canadian Shield sources, whereas by the Late Devonian, a shift of 6 εNd units to younger crustal sources (εNd (T) = −6 to −9) had occurred. In this study, we found that the shift to younger crustal Nd isotopic signatures in the Yukon and Northwest Territories occurred much earlier than in southern Alberta. Cambrian and older strata have εNd(T) values of −10.0 to −21.1, consistent with derivation from Canadian Shield sources. Lower Ordovician through Permian strata in the Yukon and Northwest Territories, including the Innuitian-derived Imperial Assemblage, have εNd(T) values of −5 to −11.4. In northern British Columbia, the shift to a younger source reflects a wider range of εNd(T) values, from -−8.7 to −14.6 in Middle Ordovician through Middle Devonian strata, suggesting continued input from Canadian Shield sources. By the Middle Devonian, a complete shift to younger crustal signatures (εNd(T) = −5.9 to −10.5) had occurred in northern British Columbia. Several sources for the more juvenile sediments include (1) a mixture of locally erupted volcanic rocks with Canadian Shield sources, (2) a Grenville source, and (3) an Innuitian source. We propose that Ordovician to Lower Devonian strata were derived from a mixture of locally erupted, juvenile volcanics and pre-Cambrian Canadian Shield sources, and post-Middle Devonian strata were sourced from the Innuitian orogen in the Canadian Arctic.


2003 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leanne J Pyle ◽  
Michael J Orchard ◽  
Christopher R Barnes ◽  
Michelle L Landry

A new Lower to Middle Devonian basinal unit of the Road River Group, herein formally named the Deserters Formation, contains argillaceous, crinoidal limestone and black shale deposited in a linear sub-basin of the Ospika Embayment, southern Kechika Trough. The abrupt lateral facies changes in the region, facies thickness, and occurrence of volcanics indicate a period of extensional tectonism. A total of 53 (4–5 kg each) samples from the Deserters Formation yielded 7766 conodont elements assigned to 14 genera representing 33 species. The formation ranges from the Lochkovian (eleanorae Zone, or lower part of the delta Zone of the Cordilleran Region) to Eifelian (australis Zone). The temporal constraints established by conodont biostratigraphy allow correlation to the Grizzly Bear Formation, a regionally restricted Lower to Middle Devonian unit in the Selwyn Basin to the north.


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