CENOZOIC STRUCTURAL JUXTAPOSITION OF THE SAN JUAN ISLANDS – WRANGELLIA AND THE NORTHWEST CASCADES – COAST PLUTONIC COMPLEX, NORTHWESTERN WASHINGTON AND SOUTHWEST BRITISH COLUMBIA

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
David T. Katopody ◽  
◽  
John S. Oldow
2012 ◽  
Vol 49 (7) ◽  
pp. 796-817 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.H. Brown

The San Juan Islands – northwest Cascades thrust system in Washington and British Columbia is composed of previously accreted terranes now assembled as four broadly defined composite nappes stacked on a continental footwall of Wrangellia and the Coast Plutonic Complex. Emplacement ages of the nappe sequence are interpreted from zircon ages, field relations, and lithlogies, to young upward. The basal nappe was emplaced prior to early Turonian time (∼93 Ma), indicated by the occurrence of age-distinctive zircons from this nappe in the Sidney Island Formation of the Nanaimo Group. The emplacement age of the highest nappe in the thrust system postdates 87 Ma detrital zircons within the nappe. The nappes bear high-pressure – low-temperature (HP–LT) mineral assemblages indicative of deep burial in a thrust wedge; however, several features indicate that metamorphism occurred prior to nappe assembly: metamorphic discontinuities at nappe boundaries, absence of HP–LT assemblages in the footwall to the nappe pile, and absence of significant unroofing detritus in the Nanaimo Group. A synorogenic relationship of the thrust system to the Nanaimo Group is evident from mutually overlapping ages and by conglomerates of Nanaimo affinity that lie within the nappe pile. From the foregoing relations, and broader Cordilleran geology, the tectonic history of the nappe terranes is interpreted to involve initial accretion and subduction-zone metamorphism south of the present locality, uplift and exhumation, orogen-parallel northward transport of the nappes as part of a forearc sliver, and finally obduction at the present site over the truncated south end of Wrangellia and the Coast Plutonic Complex.


2007 ◽  
Vol 44 (10) ◽  
pp. 1375-1396 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edwin H Brown ◽  
George E Gehrels

Detrital zircon geochronology of this report pertains to Cretaceous orogeny in northwest Washington, an event that involved blueschist metamorphism and emplacement of nappes in the San Juan Islands – northwest Cascades thrust system and continental arc magmatism and associated Barrovian metamorphism in the neighboring Coast Plutonic Complex. Structurally low in the thrust system, quartzose gneiss of the Yellow Aster Complex yields an entirely Precambrian suite of detrital zircons, with an age pattern that is similar to that of Ordovician miogeoclinal rocks and the outboard Yukon–Tanana, Yreka, and Shoo Fly terranes elsewhere in the Cordillera. Midway in the nappe pile of the northwest Cascades, sandstone in the Bell Pass Mélange has a zircon age population of 110 Ma, an age that together with the spectrum of exotic materials associated with the sandstone suggests the mélange was a major zone of dislocation during mid-Cretaceous nappe emplacement. At a high level in the thrust system are nappes of the Fidalgo Complex, Lummi Formation, Constitution Formation, and Easton Metamorphic Suite, all with a prominent age peak in the range of 148–155 Ma. These units appear to be mutually related, represent inter-arc marginal basins, and are correlative with terranes in the western Klamath Mountains. The Nooksack Formation, footwall to nappes in the Cascades, has a zircon population at 114 Ma, providing a maximum age of nappe emplacement. The Tonga Formation of the Coast Plutonic Complex bears zircons that indicate a depositional age of <125 Ma, thus yielding a maximum age for the beginning of Barrovian metamorphism and continental arc plutonism in this region.


1993 ◽  
Vol 71 (2) ◽  
pp. 401-406 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Brinckmann-Voss ◽  
D. M. Lickey ◽  
C. E. Mills

A new species of colonial athecate hydroid, Rhysia fletcheri, is described from Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, and from Friday Harbor, Washington, U.S.A. Its relationship to Rhysia autumnalis Brinckmann from the Mediterranean and Rhysia halecii (Hickson and Gravely) from the Antarctic and Japan is discussed. Rhysia fletcheri differs from Rhysia autumnalis and Rhysia halecii in the gastrozooid having distinctive cnidocyst clusters on its hypostome and few, thick tentacles. Most of its female gonozooids have no tentacles. Colonies of R. fletcheri are without dactylozooids. The majority of R. fletcheri colonies are found growing on large barnacles or among the hydrorhiza of large thecate hydrozoans. Rhysia fletcheri occurs in relatively sheltered waters of the San Juan Islands and on the exposed rocky coast of southern Vancouver Island.


2009 ◽  
Vol 121 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 1362-1380 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Brian Mahoney ◽  
Sarah M. Gordee ◽  
James W. Haggart ◽  
Richard M. Friedman ◽  
Larry J. Diakow ◽  
...  

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