COMPARATIVE STRUCTURE, BASEMENT COVER RELATIONS, TECTONIC HISTORY OF MESOPROTEROZOIC BASEMENT MASSIFS OF THE WESTERN NEW ENGLAND, VERMONT TO NEW YORK

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas M. Ratcliffe ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian W. Hillenbrand ◽  
◽  
Michael L. Williams ◽  
Michael J. Jercinovic ◽  
Daniel J. Tjapkes

2021 ◽  
pp. 21-34
Author(s):  
Steven J. Jaret* ◽  
Nicholas D. Tailby ◽  
Keiji G. Hammond ◽  
E. Troy Rasbury ◽  
Kathleen Wooton ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Here we present an overview of the geology of the Manhattan Prong and a specific guide for field stops in northern Central Park. This guide is intended to provide a brief introduction to these complex rocks for researchers, undergraduate students, and teachers. Given the easy access to Central Park and numerous schools and institutions nearby, these outcrops provide ideal teaching outcrops for students of all levels. We also present new geochemical and isotopic results for the Manhattan and Hartland Schists. Previous work has focused primarily on field mapping, structural relationships, or infrastructure-related mapping, whereas our new geochemistry data allow for more detailed discussions of provenance and overall tectonic history of these rocks. Our results suggest that all of the rocks in northern Central Park (regardless of mapped unit) are derived from Laurentia.


1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (9) ◽  
pp. 1286-1294 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. K. McDaniel ◽  
G. N. Hanson ◽  
S. M. McLennan ◽  
J. H. Sevigny

The Trap Falls Formation is a sequence of interlayered quartzites and schists that crops out in the Appalachian belt in southern Connecticut, and was deformed and metamorphosed to middle amphibolite grade during Acadian orogenesis. Schists have high Al2O3 and low CaO, Na2O, and K2O (chemical index of alteration CIA = 68–70), consistent with a significant weathering history in the sediment source. Rare earth element (REE) patterns for both schists and quartzites parallel post-Archean average Australian Shale, with light REE enrichment and well-developed Eu anomalies, suggesting an average upper crustal source. Whole-rock Nd and Pb isotopic analyses indicate old sources, with depleted mantle model ages (TDM) from 1880 to 1660 Ma, 207Pb/204Pb from 15.62 to 15.87, and 206Pb/204Pb from 19.11 to 22.08. U–Pb ages for single-grain and multigrain populations of detrital zircons range between 1113 and 992 Ma, the youngest of which defines a maximum depositional age for the Trap Falls Formation. U–Pb zircon ages indicate a late Grenvillian source for the zircons. Nd and Pb isotopic compositions are consistent with a source that is dominated by Grenville-age rocks with some component of older crust. Combining all of the data, we interpret that the protolith of the Trap Falls Formation was comprised of aluminous muds interbedded with clean quartz arenites, and suggest that they were deposited on the stable, trailing-edge margin of North America sometime during the Late Proterozoic to the Early Cambrian. The sediments were derived from a weathered source with an upper continental crust composition. Isotopic data and zircon ages indicate that this source was dominated by Grenville-age rocks.


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