Correlation of mid-Cretaceous granites with source terranes in the northern Canadian CordilleraLithoprobe Publication 1475.

2008 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 389-403 ◽  
Author(s):  
George A. Morris ◽  
Robert A. Creaser

This study presents a broad geochemical and isotopic synthesis of mid-Cretaceous granites in the southern Yukon as well as a comparative data set for granites sourced from, and hosted by, accreted terranes in the west through to ancient cratonic rocks in the east. We present data from a traverse perpendicular to the strike of the northern Canadian Cordillera allowing comparison with the growing body of such data derived from the host terranes. Trace elements, specifically the “subduction signature,” allow the discrimination of oceanic verses continental crustal sources. Comparison of isotopic ratios of Sr and, particularly, Nd with published data further refine the correlation of granites with their source terranes. Granites are initially divided based upon their host morphogeological belts, however, our study indicates that the source terranes transcend these traditional boundaries. For Intermontane Belt hosted granites three distinct sources can be identified: an isotopically primitive (Sri, 0.7050; ϵNdT, 2.3 to –1.2), subduction-related source probably associated with the mid-Cretaceous continental margin; an isotopically primitive (Sri, 0.7032 to 0.7035; ϵNdT, 4.2 to 1.4), non-subduction-related source identified as the host Cache Creek terrane; and an isotopically slightly more evolved (Sri, 0.7094 to 0.7101; ϵNdT, 4.5 to –7.3), subduction-related source identified as the host Stikine terrane. Immediately east of the Teslin Tectonic Zone (TTZ), pericratonic Omineca granites (Sri, 0.7032 to 0.7076; ϵNdT, 2.0 to –5.4) do not correlate with their host terranes, but instead show marked similarities with granites immediately to the west of the TTZ suggesting that the same, or similar crustal sources extend further east in the subsurface than previously thought. In the eastern pericratonic Omineca Belt, there is a substantial jump to more evolved isotopic values (Sri, 0.7172 to 0.7354; ϵNdT, –16.6 to –21.7) for granites that extend to the most easterly exposed plutons of the cratonic Omineca Belt. These more isotopically evolved granites correlate with isotopic values for the pericratonic Yukon–Tanana and Cassiar terranes, as well as cratonic North America.

1995 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 380-392 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Irving ◽  
J. Baker ◽  
N. Wright ◽  
C. J. Yorath ◽  
R. J. Enkin ◽  
...  

The Porteau Pluton is a variably foliated quartz diorite to granodiorite intrusion in the southern Coast Belt of the Canadian Cordillera (49.6°N, 123.2°W). 40Ar/39Ar ages are 95 ± 5 Ma from biotite and 101.5 ± 0.7 Ma from hornblende, which, together with an earlier U–Pb zircon age of 100 ± 2 Ma, indicate that the body was emplaced, uplifted, and cooled rapidly in mid-Cretaceous time. The rocks contain high coercive force (hard) remanent magnetizations with unblocking temperatures between 500 and 600 °C, close to those of Ar in hornblende, indicating that remanence was acquired at or close to the hornblende plateau age. The hard remanence directions have an elongate distribution, in agreement with the predictions of M.E. Beck regarding magnetization acquired during tilting, uplift, and cooling of plutons. No part of the distribution agrees with the direction expected from observations from rocks of mid-Cretaceous age from cratonic North America. The elongate distribution defines the axis of tilt (347° east of north) but not its direction; tilt could have been down toward the east or down toward the west. The former yields an inclination that is 29.0 ± 4.9° shallower than expected from cratonic observations, corresponding to a displacement from the south of 3200 ± 500 km. The latter reconstruction yields an inclination that is anomalously shallow by 14.8 ± 3.9°, corresponding to a displacement from the south of 1600 ± 400 km, which is a minimum estimate. It is argued, therefore, that the Porteau Pluton has undergone both tilt and displacement from the south by distances substantially in excess of 1000 km.


2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 913-937 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Škerlak ◽  
M. Sprenger ◽  
H. Wernli

Abstract. In this study we use the ERA-Interim reanalysis data set from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) and a refined version of a previously developed Lagrangian methodology to compile a global 33 yr climatology of stratosphere–troposphere exchange (STE) from 1979 to 2011. Fluxes of mass and ozone are calculated across the tropopause, pressure surfaces in the troposphere, and the top of the planetary boundary layer (PBL). This climatology provides a state-of-the-art quantification of the geographical distribution of STE and the preferred transport pathways, as well as insight into the temporal evolution of STE during the last 33 yr. We confirm the distinct zonal and seasonal asymmetry found in previous studies using comparable methods. The subset of "deep STE", where stratospheric air reaches the PBL within 4 days or vice versa, shows especially strong geographical and seasonal variations. The global hotspots for deep STE are found along the west coast of North America and over the Tibetan Plateau, especially in boreal winter and spring. An analysis of the time series reveals significant positive trends of the net downward mass flux and of deep STE in both directions, which are particularly large over North America. The downward ozone flux across the tropopause is dominated by the seasonal cycle of ozone concentrations at the tropopause and peaks in summer, when the mass flux is nearly at its minimum. For the subset of deep STE events, the situation is reversed and the downward ozone flux into the PBL is dominated by the mass flux and peaks in early spring. Thus surface ozone concentration along the west coast of North America and around the Tibetan Plateau are likely to be influenced by deep stratospheric intrusions. We discuss the sensitivity of our results on the choice of the control surface representing the tropopause, the horizontal and vertical resolution of the trajectory starting grid, and the minimum residence time τ used to filter out transient STE trajectories.


1999 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 479-494 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin de Keijzer ◽  
Paul F Williams ◽  
Richard L Brown

The Teslin zone in south-central Yukon has previously been described as a discrete zone with a steep foliation unique to the zone. It includes the Anvil assemblage and the narrowest portion of the Yukon-Tanana terrane (the Nisutlin assemblage), and is defined by post-accretionary faults: the Big Salmon fault to the west and the d'Abbadie fault system to the east. The zone was interpreted as a lithospheric suture or a crustal-scale transpression zone, and as the root zone of klippen lying on the North American craton to the east. We demonstrate that deformation and metamorphism are the same inside and outside the zone. The steep transposition foliation in the zone, in contrast to adjacent rocks to the east, coincides with the steep limb of a regional F3 structure. This fold has a shallow limb in the easternmost part of the zone and immediately east of the zone. Thus we reject earlier interpretations. If a suture exists between the obducted Anvil and Yukon-Tanana Nisutlin assemblages and North America, it is a shear zone that occurs at the base of the obducted rocks, which has been folded by the F3 fold. However, evidence that this thrust boundary is a lithospheric suture is lacking. A consequence of our interpretation is that North American rocks pass under the eastern Teslin zone and outcrop to the west of the Nisutlin and Anvil assemblages. This geometry precludes the possibility of the Teslin zone being the root zone of the klippen.


Palaeomagnetic data from Permian, Triassic and Jurassic bedded rocks, to which attitudinal corrections can be applied, yield palaeolatitudes concordant with those of ancestral North America, but very large predominantly anticlockwise rotations about vertical axes. Data from Cretaceous rocks yield apparent palaeolatitudinal displacements that increase westward. Small or negligible displacements are obtained from the Omineca Belt. Intermediate displacements (1000-2000 km) from the Intermontane Belt, are based on data from Cretaceous bedded sequences. Further to the west in the Coast Belt, larger apparent displacements (greater than 2000 km) have been obtained from plutons for which no attitudinal control is yet available. Data from Eocene rocks are concordant. Possibilities to consider are as follows: (a) little or no displacement and tilting to the southwest at about 30°; (b) large (greater than 2000 km in the Coast Belt) northward displacement since mid-Cretaceous time preceded by southward displacement of comparable magnitude in Juro-Cretaceous time; (c) lesser (1000-2000 km) overall displacement coupled with variable and lesser tilts to the south and southeast of plutons of the Coast Belt. Under hypothesis (a) the western Cordillera was formed and has remained in approximately its present position relative to ancestral North America; data from bedded volcanics of the Intermontane Belt are not consistent with this hypothesis. From the evidence currently available we favour hypotheses (b) or (c), although more data from bedded sequences are required. It is noteworthy that hypotheses (a) and (c) predict tilt directions that differ by about 90° and hence ought to be distinguishable by geological studies.


2007 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 72-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lynn P. Eldershaw

This study examines the postcharismatic fate of Vajradhatu/Shambhala International, one of the largest Buddhist communities in North America. Throughout its thirty-year history, the Shambhala movement has experienced a number of internal and external challenges. Following the untimely death of its founder, Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche, in 1987, the movement experienced a crisis in succession that garnered international negative exposure and threatened its stability. This analysis draws on recent theorizing on collective identity to examine the manner in which this movement has survived the crisis and gone about reconstituting itself. It is proposed that recent transformations in Shambhala International are indicative of larger changes in the organization of religion within contemporary pluralist culture. This study provides much-needed ethnographic data on an empirically neglected new religious movement and adds to a growing body of literature tracing the growth of Buddhism in the West.


2021 ◽  
pp. 875529302110194
Author(s):  
Daniel Verret ◽  
Denis LeBœuf ◽  
Éric Péloquin

Eastern North America (ENA) is part of a region with low-to-moderate seismicity; nonetheless, some significant seismic events have occurred in the last few decades. Recent events have reemphasized the need to review ENA seismicity and ground motion models, along with continually reevaluating and updating procedures related to the seismic safety assessment of hydroelectric infrastructures, particularly large dams in Québec. Furthermore, recent researchers have shown that site-specific characteristics, topography, and valley shapes may significantly aggravate the severity of ground motions. To the best of our knowledge, very few instrumental data from actual earthquakes have been published for examining the site effects of hydroelectric dam structures located in eastern Canada. This article presents an analysis of three small earthquakes that occurred in 1999 and 2002 at the Denis-Perron (SM-3) dam. This dam, the highest in Québec, is a rockfill embankment structure with a height of 171 m and a length of 378 m; it is located in a narrow valley. The ground motion datasets of these earthquakes include the bedrock and dam crest three-component accelerometer recordings. Ground motions are analyzed both in the time and frequency domains. The spectral ratios and transfer functions obtained from these small earthquakes provide new insights into the directionality of resonant frequencies, vibration modes, and site effects for the Denis-Perron dam. The crest amplifications observed for this dam are also compared with previously published data for large dams. New statistical relationships are proposed to establish dam crest amplification on the basis of the peak ground acceleration (PGA) at the foundation.


Author(s):  
Perrine Hoet ◽  
Chantal Jacquerye ◽  
Gladys Deumer ◽  
Dominique Lison ◽  
Vincent Haufroid

AbstractObjectivesTrace elements (TEs) from natural and anthropogenic sources are ubiquitous. Essential or not, their relevance for human health and disease is constantly expanding. Biological monitoring is a widely integrated tool in risk assessment both in occupational and environmental settings. However, the determination of appropriate and accurate reference values in the (specific) population is a prerequisite for a correct interpretation of biomonitoring data. This study aimed at determining the reference distribution for TEs (Al, As, Sb, Be, Bi, Cd, Co, Cu, Mn, Hg, Mo, Ni, Pb, Se, Tl, Sn, V, Zn) in the blood and/or plasma of the adult population in Belgium.MethodsBlood and plasma samples were analyzed for 178 males and 202 females, recruited according to an a priori selection procedure, by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS).ResultsReference values were established with high confidence for AsT, Cd, Cu, HgT, Mn, Mo, Pb, Sn, Se, Tl and Zn. Compared to previously published data in the Belgian population, a decreasing time trend is observed for Zn, Cd and Pb. Globally, the results also indicate that the current exposure levels to TEs in the Belgian population are similar to those from other recent national surveys.ConclusionsThese reference values and limits obtained through validated analytical and statistical methods will be useful for future occupational and/or environmental surveys. They will contribute to decision-making concerning both public health policies but also exposure assessments on an individual scale.


Author(s):  
Guangqing Hu ◽  
Guijian Liu ◽  
Dun Wu ◽  
Wenyong Zhang ◽  
Biao Fu

AbstractBased on analysis of a large data set and supplementary sampling and analysis for hazardous trace elements in coal samples from the Huainan Coalfield, a generalized contrast-weighted scale index method was used to establish a model to evaluate the grade of coal cleanliness and its regional distribution in the main coal seam (No. 13-1) The results showed that: (1) The contents of Cr, Mn and Ni in the coal seam are relatively high and the average values are greater than 20 μg/g. The contents of Se and Hg are at a high level while most other trace elements are at normal levels. (2) The cleanliness grade of the coal seam is mainly grade III–IV, which corresponds to a relatively good-medium coal cleanliness grade. However, some parts of the seam are at grade V (relatively poor coal cleanliness). (3) Coal of relatively good cleanliness grade (grade III) is distributed mainly in the regions corresponding to the Zhuji-Dingji-Gubei coal mines and in the eastern periphery of the Panji coal mine. Coal of medium cleanliness (grade IV) is distributed mainly in the regions of the Panji-Xiejiaji and Kouzidong coalmines. Relatively poor grade coal (grade V) is distributed in the southwest regions of the coalfield and the contents of Cr, As and Hg in coal collected from the relatively poor coal cleanliness regions often exceed the regulatory standards for the maximum concentration limits.


Data in Brief ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 30 ◽  
pp. 105438
Author(s):  
Karina L. Lecomte ◽  
Cecilia V. Echegoyen ◽  
Paula A. Vignoni ◽  
Kateřina Kopalová ◽  
Tyler J. Kohler ◽  
...  

1987 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 119-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gail M. Atkinson ◽  
David M. Boore

Abstract A stochastic model of ground motion has been used as a basis for comparison of data and theoretically-predicted relations between mN (commonly denoted by mbLg) and moment magnitude for eastern North America (ENA) earthquakes. mN magnitudes are recomputed for several historical ENA earthquakes, to ensure consistency of definition and provide a meaningful data set. We show that by itself the magnitude relation cannot be used as a discriminant between two specific spectral scaling relations, one with constant stress and the other with stress increasing with seismic moment, that have been proposed for ENA earthquakes.


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