DEVELOPMENT AND DISAGGREGATION OF A PLUTONIC COMPLEX IN SE CALIFORNIA: CONSTRAINTS ON LATE CRETACEOUS COLLAPSE OF THE SEVIER OROGEN

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee T. Hess ◽  
◽  
Michael L. Wells
1979 ◽  
Vol 16 (10) ◽  
pp. 1988-1997 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregg W. Morrison ◽  
Colin I. Godwin ◽  
Richard L. Armstrong

Sixteen new K–Ar dates and four new Rb–Sr isochrons help define four plutonic suites in the Whitehorse map area, Yukon. The Triassic(?) suite, defined on stratigraphic evidence, is the southern extension of the Yukon Crystalline Terrane and is correlative with plutonic suites in the Intermontane Belt in British Columbia. The mid-Cretaceous (~100 Ma) suite in the Intermontane Belt in the Whitehorse map area is time equivalent to plutonic suites in the Omineca Crystalline Belt to the east. Late Cretaceous (~70 Ma) and Eocene (~55 Ma) suites include volcanic and subvolcanic as well as plutonic phases and are correlative with continental volcano–plutonic suites near the eastern margin of the Coast Plutonic Complex. The predominance of the mid-Cretaceous suite in the Intermontane Belt in Whitehorse and adjacent map areas in Yukon and northern British Columbia suggests that this area has undergone posttectonic magmatism more characteristic of the Omineca Crystalline Belt than of the Intermontane Belt elsewhere in the Canadian Cordillera.87Sr/86Sr initial ratio determinations suggest that the southern extension of the Yukon Crystalline Terrane in the western part of the Whitehorse map area and in northern British Columbia includes Precambrian crust separated from the North American craton by Paleozoic oceanic crust of the Intermontane Belt.


1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 870-880 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. A. Gareau

The Scotia–Quaal metamorphic belt extends from Hawkesbury Island to Work Channel between the early Late Cretaceous Ecstall and the Paleogene Quottoon plutons. The belt consists of a Proterozoic?–Paleozoic metasedimentary and metavolcanic sequence, the Middle Devonian Big Falls orthogneiss, Early Jurassic orthogneiss, and Jurassic or Cretaceous mafic and ultramafic intrusive rocks. The assemblage may be correlative with Nisling terrane lithologies and may have shared a common history, at least from Early Jurassic time on, with rocks of Stikine terrane.Strong planar and linear fabrics, abundant folds, and scarcity of kinematic indicators characterize the belt's deformational style. Development of a strong foliation followed by three episodes of folding occurred between emplacement of the Middle Devonian Big Falls orthogneiss and early Late Cretaceous Ecstall intrusion. Paleogene fabrics occur in the Quottoon pluton and in the easternmost 1.5 km of the Scotia-Quaal belt. If a major Paleogene shear zone is postulated to explain the disparity in cooling dates, metamorphic histories, and structural styles between the western and central Coast Plutonic Complex, then it does not traverse the Scotia–Quaal metamorphic belt, but must be located within or at the western edge of the Quottoon pluton.Medium-pressure, epidote–amphibolite to upper amphibolite facies metamorphic conditions are preserved in the central region. Metamorphic grade increases gradually across the belt from west to east and from south to north. Regional metamorphism outlasted regional deformation. Contact metamorphism associated with Quottoon and Ecstall intrusion is apparent only in rocks of the southern region where regional metamorphic grades are lowest.


2019 ◽  
Vol 138 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Luca Samperi ◽  
Kamaldeen Omosanya ◽  
Giorgio Minelli ◽  
Ståle Johansen

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