Geological work on Cornwallis Island, Northwest Territories, 1951

Polar Record ◽  
1955 ◽  
Vol 7 (49) ◽  
pp. 312-313
1976 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 555-562 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. E. Evans ◽  
D. K. Bingham

The Tochatwi Formation comprises some 800 m of fine-grained red to buff sandstone in the upper part of the Great Slave Supergroup. Recent geological work indicates an age of 1700 m.y., but this is not yet known with certainty. Results from 29 sampling sites stratigraphically covering the Tochatwi Formation are presented. Standard paleomagnetic techniques indicate that post-folding remagnetization is common, and this is confirmed by analysis of the magnetic vectors removed as partial thermal demagnetization proceeds. Two phases of remagnetization are recognized, one of which can be attributed to nearby Mackenzie-age intrusions. The other phase is equivalent to a remagnetization observed by other workers in Kahochella Group strata at localities 70 km away. As yet, the source of this remagnetization event cannot be identified. Eight sampling sites have escaped total remagnetization and an earlier, pre-folding remanence has been isolated from these (D = 030, I = −11, k = 14, α95 = 15°). The corresponding pole position (144W, 18S) is remote from those deduced from North American rocks of similar age, and possible explanations of this problem are discussed.


1985 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 630-637 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. L. Washburn ◽  
Minze Stuiver

New radiocarbon dates from the University of Washington's Quaternary Isotope Laboratory are given for Cornwallis Island, Northwest Territories, Canada, and these and other radiocarbon dates for the area are assembled in a diagram, including the envelope of a tentative emergence curve. Most of the new dates are derived from surface collections but appear to represent a consistent altitude–age relationship confirming the pattern of previously published dates for the general region.The oldest of the new Holocene dates on marine shells indicate that the Resolute Bay area began emerging by at least 9700 years BP. The highest well developed marine strandlines recognized to date are at an altitude of ca. 105 m. However, the postglacial marine limit is probably some 10 m or more higher. As in adjacent regions, early postglacial emergence was initially rapid, of the order of an average 8.3 m/100 years for the first recorded 75 m, then slowed to an average 0.5 m/100 years for the last 40 m.


1977 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. G. Lee ◽  
W. G. E. Caldwell

A new species of dasycladacean alga is present in the upper Thumb Mountain and in the overlying Irene Bay Formations of the Cornwallis Group on Cornwallis Island, Northwest Territories. The alga is associated with the 'Arctic Ordovician' fauna, which is of considerable biogeographical and biostratigraphical importance. This fauna is believed to be of early Late Ordovician (Caradocian) age.The new alga is a member of the cyclocrinitid tribe and clearly is to be referred to the genus Cyclocrinites. It is distinguished from all other cyclocrinitid species by the exceptionally small size, the unusual bilobate form, and the mode of calcification of its thallus. It is believed to have lived in tropical waters which were quiet and shallow, to have been anchored to the seabed by means of rhizoids. and to have grown only in areas in which fine-grained carbonate sediment was accumulating.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document