Tectonic Significance of Upper Cambrian–Middle Ordovician Mafic Volcanic Rocks on the Alexander Terrane, Saint Elias Mountains, Northwestern Canada

2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (3) ◽  
pp. 293-314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luke P. Beranek ◽  
Cees R. van Staal ◽  
Sarah M. Gordee ◽  
William C. McClelland ◽  
Steve Israel ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
pp. 72-80
Author(s):  
S. G. Samygin

Process of formation of the island-arc rear slope is considered on the example of the Upper Cambrian–Middle Ordovician arc found in the Chingiz ridge in eastern Kazakhstan. Its occurrence is shown at the end of volcanic activity in the island-arc structure, beginning at the end of the early Arenig (from the end of the Flos century of the Early Ordovician) with tephroturbidites appearance. After the cessation of volcanism, two sedimentation cycles were distinguished in the sedimentary section of the slope in the middle Ordovician: (1) transgressive when the island arc submerged, (2) and regressive when the Chingiz arc began to build up at the beginning of the Llanwyrn (Darrivilian) century. The sedimentation was repeatedly accompanied by landslide processes, which ended in the middle of llanvirna (darrivilia) with the disruption of tectonic-gravity plate composed of Upper Cambrian volcanic rocks with limestone in the sole, resulting in the formation of coarsely fragmented mixtite at the allochthonous mass frontier, the further sedimentation on the rear slope stopped. Keywords: the island-arc; rear slope; sedimentation cycles; landslide processes


2021 ◽  
Vol 57 ◽  
pp. 239-273
Author(s):  
Allan Ludman ◽  
Christopher McFarlane ◽  
Amber T.H. Whittaker

Volcanic rocks in the Miramichi inlier in Maine occur in two areas separated by the Bottle Lake plutonic complex: the Danforth segment (Stetson Mountain Formation) north of the complex and Greenfield segment to the south (Olamon Stream Formation). Both suites are dominantly pyroclastic, with abundant andesite, dacite, and rhyolite tuffs and subordinate lavas, breccias, and agglomerates. Rare basaltic tuffs and a small area of basaltic tuffs, agglomerates, and lavas are restricted to the Greenfield segment. U–Pb zircon geochronology dates Greenfield segment volcanism at ca. 469 Ma, the Floian–Dapingian boundary between the Lower and Middle Ordovician. Chemical analyses reveal a calc-alkaline suite erupted in a continental volcanic arc, either the Meductic or earliest Balmoral phase of Popelogan arc activity. The Maine Miramichi volcanic rocks are most likely correlative with the Meductic Group volcanic suite in west-central New Brunswick. Orogen-parallel lithologic and chemical variations from New Brunswick to east-central Maine may result from eruptions at different volcanic centers. The bimodal Poplar Mountain volcanic suite at the Maine–New Brunswick border is 10–20 myr younger than the Miramichi volcanic rocks and more likely an early phase of back-arc basin rifting than a late-stage Meductic phase event. Coeval calc-alkaline arc volcanism in the Miramichi, Weeksboro–Lunksoos Lake, and Munsungun Cambrian–Ordovician inliers in Maine is not consistent with tectonic models involving northwestward migration of arc volcanism. This >150 km span cannot be explained by a single east-facing subduction zone, suggesting more than one subduction zone/arc complex in the region.


2001 ◽  
Vol 75 (2) ◽  
pp. 241-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean P. Robson ◽  
Brian R. Pratt

Linguliform brachiopods were recovered from the Upper Cambrian Downes Point Member (lower Sunwaptan) and from the Middle Ordovician Factory Cove Member (Arenig) of the Shallow Bay Formation, Cow Head Group, of western Newfoundland. These rocks are a series of Middle Cambrian to Middle Ordovician conglomerates, lime mudstones, and shales that formed a sediment apron at the base of the lower Paleozoic continental slope of Laurentia. The linguliform brachiopod fauna consists of sixteen species assigned to twelve genera. Three new species are described: Picnotreta lophocracenta, Neotreta humberensis, and Siphonotretella parvaducta.


1995 ◽  
Vol 132 (5) ◽  
pp. 549-556 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. R. Phillips ◽  
R. P. Barnes ◽  
R. J. Merriman ◽  
J. D. Floyd

AbstractIn the northern part of the Southern Uplands, restricted volumes of basic igneous rocks occur at or near the base of the Ordovician sedimentary strata. These rocks have previously been interpreted as ocean-floor tholeiites representative of the subducted Iapetus oceanic plate, preserved as tectonic slivers in a fore-arc accretionary prism. The alternative, back-arc basin model proposed for the Southern Uplands on sedimentological evidence raises questions over the origin of these rocks. New geochemical data and previously published data clearly indicate that the volcanic material does not have a simple single source. The oldest (Arenig) volcanic rocks from the Moffat Shale Group associated with the Leadhills Fault include alkaline within-plate basalts and tholeiitic lavas which possibly display geochemical characteristics of midocean ridge basalts. In the northernmost occurrence, alkaline and tholeiitic basalts contained within the Caradoc Marchburn Formation are both of within-plate ocean island affinity. To the south, in the Gabsnout Burn area, the Moffat Shale Group contains lenticular bodies of dolerite and basalt which have characteristics of island-arc to transitional basalts. This complex association of basaltic volcanic rocks is, at the present time, difficult to reconcile with either a simple fore-arc or back-arc setting for the Southern Uplands. However, the increasing arc-related chemical influence on basic rock geochemistry towards the southeast may tentatively be used in support of a southern arc-terrane, and as a result, a back-arc situation for the Southern Uplands basin. An alternative is that these volcanic rocks may represent the local basement to the basin and include remnants of an arc precursor to the Southern Uplands basin.


1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 433-441 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moira Smith

The northwestern Cascades structural province can be interpreted as an accretionary complex comprising fault-bounded blocks of pre-Tertiary metamorphic rocks of diverse age and lithologic type. This paper documents the deformation in a portion of the Chilliwack Group, a unit in this complex. The Chilliwack Group is a thick sequence of volcaniclastic sedimentary rocks, calc-alkaline volcanic rocks, and limestone that is metamorphosed to low-grade blueschist facies. The rocks underwent ductile deformation during a Late Cretaceous orogenic event, producing a subhorizontal foliation and, in appropriate lithologies, subhorizontal stretching lineations that trend N20°W. Finite strain sustained by coarse clastic rocks produced RXZ values averaging 3.5. The deformation at least partially postdates the high pressure metamorphic event, based on the presence of bent and broken high-pressure mineral grains. Although early studies postulated west-vergent thrust imbrication of units in the northwest Cascades, the N20°W direction of apparent elongation in the Chilliwack Group, consistent with the direction of motion along segments of the Shuksan fault elucidated in other more recent studies, may reflect significant, highly oblique components of convergence during formation of the western North Cascades collisional orogen.


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