Petrology and volcanology of the Mesoproterozoic igneous rocks of the Saint Francois Mountains terrane, southeast Missouri, USA

2021 ◽  
pp. 253-289
Author(s):  
Gary S. Michelfelder*

ABSTRACT The Saint Francois Mountains are the physiographic expression of the central part of the Ozark Dome of southeastern Missouri. The mountains are made up of a quaquaversal-dipping series of Paleozoic units cored by the Mesoproterozoic-aged rocks of the broader Saint Francois Mountains terrane. The Saint Francois Mountains terrane lies within the Eastern Granite-Rhyolite province along the eastern margin of Laurentia and contains at least four mapped caldera complexes (Eminence, Lake Killarney, Butler Hill, and Taum Sauk), associated volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks, and four distinct types of intrusive units. The Mesoproterozoic rocks represent two major pulses of magmatic activity: (1) an older 1.48–1.45 Ga episode of caldera-forming volcanism and associated subvolcanic to massif-type granitic intrusions; and (2) a younger 1.33–1.28 Ga episode of bimodal intrusions. Volcanism included primarily high-silica rhyolite and volcaniclastic sediments associated with caldera-forming volcanism with lesser amounts of basalt and basaltic andesite that formed as flows and subvolcanic intrusions. The older (ca. 1.4 Ga) intrusive rocks can be divided into three broad categories: (1) granite massifs including the Butler Hill/Breadtray massif-type granites, (2) caldera ring–type granites such as the Silvermine Granite, and (4) mafic- to intermediate-composition intrusive rocks such as the Silver Mines Mafic Series. The younger (ca. 1.3 Ga) bimodal intrusions are represented by the highly evolved felsic Graniteville-types granites and the gabbros of the Skrainka Mafic Group. This field guide provides an overview of the magmatic history of the Mesoproterozoic rocks exposed in the eastern Saint Francois Mountains. Field-trip stops are divided into two days, highlighting well-known stops and lesser-known localities that illustrate the magmatic activity of one the premier igneous locations in the midcontinent region. The field trip is focused on two main areas. Day 1 focuses on the rhyolite sequence and associated caldera-forming eruption of the Taum Sauk caldera. Day 2 focuses on the volcanic rocks and granitic intrusions related to the Butler Hill caldera and ends with a visit to one of the youngest granitoids in the terrane, the Graniteville Granite. The field guide presents a summary of the volcanic history and petrogenesis of the Saint Francois Mountains rhyolites and granites.

2000 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark A Jirsa

The Midway sequence is an assemblage of subaerially deposited clastic and volcanic rocks that forms a narrow wedge within Neoarchean greenstone of the western Wawa subprovince of the Superior Province. Volcanic conglomerate in the Midway sequence contains clasts of stratigraphically older greenstone, together with clasts of a distinctive hornblende-phyric trachyandesite that is not represented among the older greenstone flows. The trachyandesite forms flows and pyroclastic units that are interbedded with lenticular deposits of volcanic conglomerate in a manner interpreted to indicate approximately coeval volcanism and alluvial fan - fluvial sedimentation within a linear, restricted, and tectonically active depocentre. The Midway sequence unconformably overlies greenstone on one side and is bounded by a regional-scale, strike-slip fault on the other. Structural analyses show that the Midway sequence was deposited after an early, precleavage folding event (D1) in greenstone, but before the regional metamorphic cleavage-forming D2 deformation. Lithologic and structural attributes are consistent with deposition in a strike-slip "pull-apart" basin. The stratigraphic and structural characteristics of the Midway sequence are generally similar to those of the Timiskaming Group and Timiskaming-type rocks in Canada, and more specifically to those of the Shebandowan Group in the Thunder Bay district. This similarity implies that the latest Archean tectonic and magmatic history of the western Wawa subprovince may have been nearly synchronous over great distances.


1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (9) ◽  
pp. 1970-1980 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. K. Mortensen ◽  
K. D. Card

New U–Pb zircon, titanite, and monazite ages help constrain the history of magmatism and tectonism within the Pontiac Subprovince of western Quebec. The Pontiac Subprovince resembles other metasedimentary belts of the Superior Province; however, the stratigraphic relationships between the dominantly sedimentary rocks of the Pontiac and the adjacent, volcanic-dominated Abitibi belt to the north and west remain controversial. Volcanic rocks of the Belleterre volcanic zone in the southern part of the Pontiac Subprovince have been interpreted by other workers as klippen of Abitibi strata that were thrust southward onto the Pontiac Subprovince. However, volcanic rocks in the Belleterre zone give crystallization ages of 2689–2682 Ma, which are younger than any extrusive rocks dated thus far from the Abitibi belt. Single detrital zircon grains from Pontiac sedimentary rocks give ages as young as 2683 Ma, indicating that the sediments are similar in age, or younger than, the volcanic units. The volcanic rocks probably represent distal facies of small volcanic arcs deposited within a large turbidite basin.The Lac des Quinze tonalitic gneiss body gives U–Pb zircon and titanite ages of 2695 ± 1 Ma and 2673 ± 4 Ma, respectively. Although the gneiss may represent basement to the supracrustal units, field relationships indicate that it was tectonically juxtaposed against the supracrustal package. Alkaline intrusive rocks in the Pontiac Subprovince yield U–Pb ages that overlap with the youngest ages obtained from the volcanic units. This attests to a very short-lived cycle of sedimentation and arc magmatism, followed by late tectonic and posttectonic alkaline plutonism.


1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (12) ◽  
pp. 2075-2088 ◽  
Author(s):  
David R. Melling ◽  
Charles E. Blackburn ◽  
David H. Watkinson ◽  
Jack R. Parker

The Archean volcanic rocks in the Cameron–Rowan lakes area may be divided into three distinct successions based on field mapping, petrographic studies, and lithogeochemical characteristics. The lowermost Rowan Lake Volcanics are tholeiitic pillowed basalts. These rocks are unconformably overlain by the Cameron Lake Volcanics, a mixed succession of tholeiitic massive and pillowed basalts and intermediate to felsic volcaniclastic rocks. The Brooks Lake Volcanics consist of tholeiitic basalts and represent the youngest volcanic rocks at the top of the preserved succession.Most of the gold concentrations in the Cameron–Rowan lakes area are confined to the mixed Cameron Lake Volcanics. The majority of these, including the Cameron Lake deposit, occur within shear zones near lithologic contacts. In the Eagle–Wabigoon and Manitou lakes areas there are similar stratigraphic subdivisions of the supracrustal rocks and many of the gold concentrations also occur in deformation zones within the mixed volcanic successions. The contrasting competencies among the basalts, the intermediate to felsic volcaniclastic rocks, and the intrusive rocks, which are characteristic of the mixed volcanic successions, localized stress during deformation, forming shear zones into which gold-bearing fluids gained access. The potential for successfully delineating economic gold concentrations appears greatest in the mixed volcanic successions within these areas and elsewhere in the western Wabigoon Subprovince of the Canadian Shield.


1998 ◽  
Vol 89 (4) ◽  
pp. 233-247 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. R. Phillips ◽  
R. A. Smith ◽  
J. D. Floyd

AbstractThe Bail Hill Volcanic Group (Caradoc) represents the largest, single volcanic complex exposed within the Ordovician turbidite succession of the Northern Belt in the Southern Uplands of Scotland. The group comprises a heterogeneous sequence of submarine lavas, volcaniclastic and intrusive rocks (up to 2 km thick), and crops out in a small area (c. 4 km2) around Bail Hill, north of Sanquhar. The Cat Cleuch Formation (older) is dominated by a sequence of autobrecciated basaltic lavas which contain large, zoned diopsidic clinopyroxene. The overlying Peat Rig Formation comprises a more mixed sequence of plagioclase-amphibole-phyric lavas, volcaniclastic rocks and contemporaneous volcaniclastic sedimentary rocks. The Cat Cleuch and lower part of the Peat Rig formations are cut by a vent breccia, the Bught Craig vent breccia, which formed part of the feeder to the upper part of the Peat Rig Formation. The Bail Hill volcanic rocks are alkaline in character, ranging from alkali basalt to trachyandesite in composition, possessing trace element characteristics and enrichment patterns typical of oceanic within-plate basalts. The Bail Hill Volcanic Group, although geochemically distinct, forms part of a mixed assemblage of tholeiitic and alkaline withinplate lavas within the Southern Uplands which are of broadly similar age, some of which are intercalated within the greywacke sandstone sequence. This assemblage clearly indicates that a period of extension and within-plate volcanism occurred during the early stages of the development of the Southern Uplands sedimentary basin.


2010 ◽  
Vol 47 (10) ◽  
pp. 1347-1366 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. H. Brown ◽  
G. E. Gehrels ◽  
V. A. Valencia

The Chilliwack composite terrane in northwest Washington is part of an assemblage of mid-Paleozoic arc terranes extending from California to Alaska. Some terranes bear evidence of exotic origin, whereas others apparently formed proximal to western Laurentia, posing a complex problem in unraveling the Paleozoic accretionary history of the Cordillera. In our proposed broader definition, the Chilliwack composite terrane includes the volcanic and sedimentary East Sound and Chilliwack groups, and the plutonic and metamorphic Turtleback and Yellow Aster complexes. New zircon ages indicate that the plutonic and volcanic rocks are mutually related as parts of the same arc complex and that its inception was as old as Late Ordovician to Silurian, older than most other parts of the mid-Paleozoic terrane assemblage. Basement to the arc complex is a passive margin assemblage of metamorphosed quartzose sandstone and calc-silicate rock of the Yellow Aster Complex, bracketed in age by ca. 1000 Ma detrital zircons and 418 Ma intrusive rocks. This association of paragneiss basement and overlying and (or) intruding arc resembles that of older parts of the extensive Yukon–Tanana terrane in the northern Cordillera. Detrital zircon ages support a western Laurentian pericratonic origin for the paragneiss basement and the overlying arc. However, an early to mid-Paleozoic connection of this assemblage to the exotic outboard Alexander terrane is also indicated, based on (1) Mesoproterozoic and early Paleozoic detrital zircons in Devonian sedimentary rocks of the arc, and also in certain other pericratonic Devonian terranes and strata of the miogeocline; (2) Late Ordovician – Silurian igneous ages; and (3) an earliest Devonian or older metamorphic age of the basement paragneiss.


Geosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qigui Mao ◽  
Jingbin Wang ◽  
Wenjiao Xiao ◽  
Brian F. Windley ◽  
Karel Schulmann ◽  
...  

The Kalatage inlier in the Dananhu-Haerlik arc is one of the most important arcs in the Eastern Tianshan, southern Altaids (or Central Asian orogenic belt). Based on outcrop maps and core logs, we report 16 new U-Pb dates in order to reconstruct the stratigraphic framework of the Dananhu-Haerlik arc. The new U-Pb ages reveal that the volcanic and intrusive rocks formed in the interval from the Ordovician to early Permian (445–299 Ma), with the oldest diorite dike at 445 ± 3 Ma and the youngest rhyolite at 299 ± 2 Ma. These results constrain the ages of the oldest basaltic and volcaniclastic rocks of the Ordovician Huangchaopo Group, which were intruded by granite- granodiorite-diorite plutons in the Late Ordovician to middle Silurian (445–426 Ma). The second oldest components are intermediate volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks of the early Silurian Hongliuxia Formation (S1h), which lies unconformably on the Huangchaopo Group and is unconformably overlain by Early Devonian volcanic rocks (416 Ma). From the mid- to late Silurian (S2-3), all the rocks were exhumed, eroded, and overlain by polymictic pyroclastic deposits. Following subaerial to shallow subaqueous burial at 416–300 Ma by intermediate to felsic volcanic and volcaniclastics rocks, the succession was intruded by diorites, granodiorites, and granites (390–314 Ma). The arc volcanic and intrusive rocks are characterized by potassium enrichment, when they evolved from mafic to felsic and from tholeiitic via transitional and calc-alkaline to final high-K calc- alkaline compositions with relatively low initial Sr values, (87Sr/86Sr)i = 0.70391–0.70567, and positive εNd(t) values, +4.1 to +9.2. These new data suggest that the Dananhu-Haerlik arc is a long-lived arc that consequently requires a new evolutionary model. It began as a nascent (immature) intra-oceanic arc in the Ordovician to early Silurian, and it evolved into a mature island arc in the middle Silurian to early Permian. The results suggest that the construction of a juvenile-to-mature arc, in combination with its lateral attachment to an incoming arc or continent, was an important crustal growth mechanism in the southern Altaids.


2008 ◽  
Vol 146 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. VON GOSEN

AbstractAnalyses of structures in the western part of the North Patagonian Massif (southern Argentina) suggest a polyphase evolution, accompanied by continuous intrusive activity. The first two deformations (D1, D2) and metamorphism affected the upper Palaeozoic, partly possibly older Cushamen Formation clastic succession and different intrusive rocks. A second group of intrusions, emplaced after the second deformational episode (D2), in many places contain angular xenoliths of the foliated country rocks, indicating high intrusive levels with brittle fracturing of the crust. Deformation of these magmatic rocks presumably began during (the final stage of) cooling and continued under solid-state conditions. It probably coincided with the third deformational event (D3) in the country rocks. Based on published U–Pb zircon ages of deformed granitoids, the D2-deformation and younger event along with the regional metamorphism are likely to be Permian in age. An onset of the deformational and magmatic history during Carboniferous times, however, cannot be excluded. The estimated ~W–E to NE–SW compression during the D2-deformation, also affecting the first group of intrusive rocks, can be related to subduction beneath the western Patagonia margin or an advanced stage of collisional tectonics within extra-Andean Patagonia. The younger ~N–S to NE–SW compression might have been an effect of oblique subduction in the west and/or continuing collision-related deformation. As a cause for its deviating orientation, younger block rotations during strike-slip faulting cannot be excluded. The previous D2-event presumably also had an effect on compression at the northern Patagonia margin that was interpreted as result of Patagonia's late Palaeozoic collision with the southwestern Gondwana margin. With the recently proposed Carboniferous subduction and collision south of the North Patagonian Massif, the entire scenario might suggest that Patagonia consists of two different pieces that were amalgamated with southwestern Gondwana during Late Palaeozoic times.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document