Early Tertiary thermotectonic history of the northern Yukon and adjacent Northwest Territories, Arctic Canada

1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (10) ◽  
pp. 1366-1378 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul B. O'Sullivan ◽  
Larry S. Lane

Apatite fission-track data from 16 sedimentary and crystalline rock samples indicate rapid regional Early Eocene denudation within the onshore Beaufort–Mackenzie region of northwestern Canada. Rocks exposed in the area of the Big Fish River, Northwest Territories, cooled rapidly from paleotemperatures of >80–110 °C to <6 0°C at ca. 56 ± 2 Ma, probably in response to kilometre-scale denudation associated with regional structuring. The data suggest the region experienced a geothermal gradient of ~28 °C/km prior to rapid cooling, with ~2.7 km of section having been removed from the top of the exposed section in the Moose Channel Formation and ~3.8 km from the top of the exposed Cuesta Creek Member. Farther to the west, rocks exposed in the headwaters of the Blow River in the Barn Mountains, Yukon Territories, were exposed to paleotemperatures above 110 °C in the Late Paleocene prior to rapid cooling from these elevated paleotemperatures due to kilometre-scale denudation at ca. 56 ± 2 Ma. Exposure of these samples at the surface today requires that a minimum of ~3.8 km of denudation occurred since they began cooling below ~110 °C. The apatite analyses indicate that rocks exposed in the northern Yukon and Northwest Territories experienced rapid cooling during the Early Eocene in response to kilometre-scale denudation, associated with early Tertiary folding and thrusting in the northern Cordillera. Early Eocene cooling–uplift ages for onshore sections are slightly older than the Middle Eocene ages previously documented for the adjacent offshore foldbelt and suggest that the deformation progressed toward the foreland of the foldbelt through time.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tatyana Bagdasaryan ◽  
Roman Veselovskiy ◽  
Viktor Zaitsev ◽  
Anton Latyshev

&lt;p&gt;The largest continental igneous province, the Siberian Traps, was formed within the Siberian platform at the Paleozoic-Mesozoic boundary, ca. 252 million years ago. Despite the continuous and extensive investigation of the duration and rate of trap magmatism on the Siberian platform, these questions are still debated. Moreover, the post-Paleozoic thermal history of the Siberian platform is almost unknown. This study aims to reconstruct the thermal history of the Siberian platform during the last 250 Myr using the low-temperature thermochronometry. We have studied intrusive complexes from different parts of the Siberian platform, such as the Kotuy dike, the Odikhincha, Magan and Essey ultrabasic alkaline massifs, the Norilsk-1 and Kontayskaya intrusions, and the Padunsky sill. We use apatite fission-track (AFT) thermochronology to assess the time since the rocks were cooled below 110&amp;#8451;. Obtained AFT ages (207-173 Ma) are much younger than available U-Pb and Ar/Ar ages of the traps. This pattern might be interpreted as a long cooling of the studied rocks after their emplacement ca. 250 Ma, but this looks quite unlikely because contradicts to the geological observations. Most likely, the rocks were buried under a thick volcanic-sedimentary cover and then exhumed and cooled below 110&amp;#8451; ca. 207-173 Ma. Considering the increased geothermal gradient up to 50&amp;#8451;/km at that times, we can estimate the thickness of the removed overlying volcanic-sedimentary cover up to 207-173 Ma as about 2-3 km.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The research was carried out with the support of RFBR (grants 20-35-90066, 18-35-20058, 18-05-00590 and 18-05-70094) and the Program of development of Lomonosov Moscow State University.&lt;/p&gt;


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 1937-1954
Author(s):  
Jakub Witkowski ◽  
Karolina Bryłka ◽  
Steven M. Bohaty ◽  
Elżbieta Mydłowska ◽  
Donald E. Penman ◽  
...  

Abstract. The Paleogene history of biogenic opal accumulation in the North Atlantic provides insight into both the evolution of deepwater circulation in the Atlantic basin and weathering responses to major climate shifts. However, existing records are compromised by low temporal resolution and/or stratigraphic discontinuities. In order to address this problem, we present a multi-site, high-resolution record of biogenic silica (bioSiO2) accumulation from Blake Nose (ODP Leg 171B, western North Atlantic) spanning the early Paleocene to late Eocene time interval (∼65–34 Ma). This record represents the longest single-locality history of marine bioSiO2 burial compiled to date and offers a unique perspective into changes in bioSiO2 fluxes through the early to middle Paleogene extreme greenhouse interval and the subsequent period of long-term cooling. Blake Nose bioSiO2 fluxes display prominent fluctuations that we attribute to variations in sub-thermocline nutrient supply via cyclonic eddies associated with the Gulf Stream. Following elevated and pulsed bioSiO2 accumulation through the Paleocene to early Eocene greenhouse interval, a prolonged interval of markedly elevated bioSiO2 flux in the middle Eocene between ∼46 and 42 Ma is proposed to reflect nutrient enrichment at Blake Nose due to invigorated overturning circulation following an early onset of Northern Component Water export from the Norwegian–Greenland Sea at ∼49 Ma. Reduced bioSiO2 flux in the North Atlantic, in combination with increased bioSiO2 flux documented in existing records from the equatorial Pacific between ∼42 and 38 Ma, is interpreted to indicate diminished nutrient supply and reduced biosiliceous productivity at Blake Nose in response to weakening of the overturning circulation. Subsequently, in the late Eocene, a deepwater circulation regime favoring limited bioSiO2 burial in the Atlantic and enhanced bioSiO2 burial in the Pacific was established after ∼38 Ma, likely in conjunction with re-invigoration of deepwater export from the North Atlantic. We also observe that Blake Nose bioSiO2 fluxes through the middle Eocene cooling interval (∼48 to 34 Ma) are similar to or higher than background fluxes throughout the late Paleocene–early Eocene interval (∼65 to 48 Ma) of intense greenhouse warmth. This observation is consistent with a temporally variable rather than constant silicate weathering feedback strength model for the Paleogene, which would instead predict that marine bioSiO2 burial should peak during periods of extreme warming.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Lai Kwan Denise Tang

<p>Hong Kong represents a microcosm of the magmatic and tectonic processes that are related to formation of the Southeast China Magmatic Belt (SCMB, ~1,300 km long by 400 km wide). The SCMB is dominated by extensive Mesozoic (Yanshanian Orogeny) igneous rocks, which form part of an extensive, long-lived circum-Pacific igneous province. In Hong Kong, large silicic ignimbrites, produced from several calderas identified through geological mapping, together with their sub-volcanic plutons record a ~26-Myr period of magmatic activities from ~164 to 138 Ma. This work studies these volcanic-plutonic assemblages with the associated Lantau and High Island caldera complexes, with an emphasis on the ~143-138 Ma period from the latter complex. This study uses multiple techniques, including field studies, zircon geochronology and trace element analyses, and zircon and apatite low-temperature thermochronology, to gain new insights into the Mesozoic tectono-magmatic history in this region.  Field studies demonstrate that the High Island caldera complex (with its main collapse at 140.9±0.4 Ma in association with the High Island Tuff) is structurally more complex than previously suggested and represents a long-lived, large (320 km²) feature. The volcanic strata exposed in the eastern part of the caldera are inferred to have been tilted during syneruptive, asymmetric collapse of the caldera floor, whereas those in other parts have been affected by block faulting but not overall tilting. Two ignimbrites (e.g. Long Harbour: 141.4±1.0 Ma) exposed within the caldera outline are now interpreted to have accumulated in local volcano-tectonic basins, confined by faults that were later exploited by dyke intrusions. Field observations offer important constraints on the ages of volcanic and plutonic units, which have been tested by zircon U-Pb dating in this study. The field evidence also negates a previous interpretation that there was an overall tilting of the High Island caldera complex.  U-Pb dating and trace element analyses using secondary-ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) techniques have been carried out on zircons separated from 21 samples, chosen from both volcanic and plutonic samples within the Lantau and High Island Caldera complexes. The SIMS age datasets reveal two groups: (1) seven samples with unimodal age spectra; and (2) fourteen samples yielding multiple age components. Five samples in group 1 yield mean ages indistinguishable from their previously published ID-TIMS ages, demonstrating that the SIMS techniques have generated results fully in agreement with the ID-TIMS methods, although with overall less precision. Of the two other samples, one is slightly younger than the published ID-TIMS age, and the other has no previous age determination. Thirteen samples in group 2 are interpreted to have crystallisation/eruption ages that are younger (although often within 2.s.d. uncertainties) than their corresponding ID-TIMS values. The remaining sample from this group has no previous age determination. The overall age patterns from both groups suggest that, instead of separate phases of activity at ~143 and 141-140 Ma as previously inferred, magmatic and volcanic activities were continuous (within age analytical uncertainties) over a ~5 Myr period. Direct linkages between several plutonic and volcanic units in this period of activity (e.g. High Island Tuff and the Kowloon Granite) are no longer supported by the age data, and magmatic activity represented by exposed plutons continued until 137.8±0.8 Ma, as with the Mount Butler Granite.  Under CL imagery, a wide variety of zircon textures is evident, indicative of complex processes that operated in the magmatic systems. Zircon trace element data coupled with textural characteristics enable identification of some common petrogenetic processes. Overall, the intra-grain (cores-rims, sector-zoned zircons) and intra-sample variations in trace element abundance and elemental ratios are more significant than the differences between individual samples. Zircon chemistries in samples from both the volcanic and plutonic records indicate that there are two groups of volcanic-plutonic products through the history of the High Island Caldera magmatic system. Two evolutionary models are proposed here to explain these two groups. In the first model, the magmatic system comprises a single domain that fluctuated in temperature through varying inputs of hotter melts (and was randomly tapped). In the second model the intrusive and extrusive products represent interplay of two magmatic domains in the crust, with contrasting characteristics.  Zircon and apatite fission track analyses have been carried out on several of the rocks dated by U-Pb methods (either SIMS or TIMS), together with a selection of other Mesozoic igneous rocks and post-magmatic Cretaceous and Eocene sediments to cover the geographic area of Hong Kong. The fission-track dataset and associated thermal modelling show that the igneous rocks and Cretaceous sediments (but not the Eocene sediments) together experienced post-emplacement or post-depositional heating to >250 ºC, subsequently cooling through 120-60 ºC after ~80 Ma. The heating reflects the combined effects of an enhanced geothermal gradient and burial. The enhanced geothermal gradient is interpreted to represent continuing Yanshanian magmatic activity at depth, without any documented surface eruption products, until ~100-80 Ma. The data also indicate a long-term, slow cooling (~1 ºC/Myr) since the early Cenozoic, linked to ~2-3 km of erosion-driven exhumation. The thermo-tectonic history of Hong Kong reflects the mid-Cretaceous transition of southeast China from an active to a passive margin bordered by marginal basins that formed in the early Cenozoic. The inferred cessation of magmatism at depth below Hong Kong at ~100-80 Ma is broadly coincident with the cessation of plutonic activity in many other circum-Pacific magmatic provinces related to reorganisation of Pacific Plate motion.</p>


1995 ◽  
Vol 32 (8) ◽  
pp. 1106-1118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul B. O'sullivan ◽  
Catherine L. Hanks ◽  
Wesley K. Wallace ◽  
Paul F. Green

The northeastern Brooks Range of Alaska is a complex Mesozoic to Cenozoic northward-verging fold and thrust belt. In response to regional compression, shortening in the upper crust has occurred through the duplexing of thrust sheets and formation of associated fault-bend folds. Apatite and zircon fission-track data from the Okpilak batholith and adjacent sedimentary rocks exposed within the northeastern Brooks Range provide new constraints on the timing, magnitude, and rate of cooling of these thrust sheets as they were rapidly denuded in response to uplift during Cenozoic time. Fission-track results indicate that a previously recognized episode of Paleocene cooling was followed by at least two younger episodes of rapid cooling during Middle Eocene and Late Oligocene time. The two younger episodes of rapid cooling are interpreted to reflect denudation in response to uplift resulting from Cenozoic thrusting and related folding. As a result of structural thickening, up to 8 km of material was eroded from the top of the batholith between ~41–45 Ma (Middle Eocene). Renewed shortening and emplacement of an underlying thrust sheet at ~25 Ma (Late Oligocene) resulted in at least 2 km of uplift and erosion of sedimentary rocks immediately north of the batholith. These results suggest that, even though Paleocene uplift and erosion may have occurred across the northeastern Brooks Range, the major episode of thrust faulting, responsible for structural emplacement of the batholith into its present position and kilometre-scale denudation, most likely occurred during Middle Eocene time.


Author(s):  
Paul F. Green ◽  
Peter Japsen

Apatite fission-track analysis (AFTA) data in two Upper Jurassic core samples from the 231 m deep Blokelv-1 borehole, Jameson Land, East Greenland, combined with vitrinite reflectance data and regional AFTA data, define three palaeo-thermal episodes. We interpret localised early Eocene (55– 50 Ma) palaeotemperatures as representing localised early Eocene heating related to intrusive activity whereas we interpret late Eocene (40–35 Ma) and late Miocene (c. 10 Ma) palaeotemperatures as representing deeper burial followed by successive episodes of exhumation. For a palaeogeothermal gradient of 30°C/km and likely palaeo-surface temperatures, the late Eocene palaeotemperatures require that the Upper Jurassic marine section in the borehole was buried below a 2750 m thick cover of Upper Jurassic – Eocene rocks prior to the onset of late Eocene exhumation. As these sediments are now near outcrop at c. 200 m above sea level, they have been uplifted by at least 3 km since maximum burial during post-rift thermal subsidence. The results are consistent with estimates of rock uplift on Milne Land since the late Eocene and with interpretation of Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) data off South-East Greenland suggesting that mid-Cenozoic uplift of the margin triggered the marked influx of coarse clastic turbidites during the late Oligocene above a middle Eocene to upper Oligocene hiatus.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Lai Kwan Denise Tang

<p>Hong Kong represents a microcosm of the magmatic and tectonic processes that are related to formation of the Southeast China Magmatic Belt (SCMB, ~1,300 km long by 400 km wide). The SCMB is dominated by extensive Mesozoic (Yanshanian Orogeny) igneous rocks, which form part of an extensive, long-lived circum-Pacific igneous province. In Hong Kong, large silicic ignimbrites, produced from several calderas identified through geological mapping, together with their sub-volcanic plutons record a ~26-Myr period of magmatic activities from ~164 to 138 Ma. This work studies these volcanic-plutonic assemblages with the associated Lantau and High Island caldera complexes, with an emphasis on the ~143-138 Ma period from the latter complex. This study uses multiple techniques, including field studies, zircon geochronology and trace element analyses, and zircon and apatite low-temperature thermochronology, to gain new insights into the Mesozoic tectono-magmatic history in this region.  Field studies demonstrate that the High Island caldera complex (with its main collapse at 140.9±0.4 Ma in association with the High Island Tuff) is structurally more complex than previously suggested and represents a long-lived, large (320 km²) feature. The volcanic strata exposed in the eastern part of the caldera are inferred to have been tilted during syneruptive, asymmetric collapse of the caldera floor, whereas those in other parts have been affected by block faulting but not overall tilting. Two ignimbrites (e.g. Long Harbour: 141.4±1.0 Ma) exposed within the caldera outline are now interpreted to have accumulated in local volcano-tectonic basins, confined by faults that were later exploited by dyke intrusions. Field observations offer important constraints on the ages of volcanic and plutonic units, which have been tested by zircon U-Pb dating in this study. The field evidence also negates a previous interpretation that there was an overall tilting of the High Island caldera complex.  U-Pb dating and trace element analyses using secondary-ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) techniques have been carried out on zircons separated from 21 samples, chosen from both volcanic and plutonic samples within the Lantau and High Island Caldera complexes. The SIMS age datasets reveal two groups: (1) seven samples with unimodal age spectra; and (2) fourteen samples yielding multiple age components. Five samples in group 1 yield mean ages indistinguishable from their previously published ID-TIMS ages, demonstrating that the SIMS techniques have generated results fully in agreement with the ID-TIMS methods, although with overall less precision. Of the two other samples, one is slightly younger than the published ID-TIMS age, and the other has no previous age determination. Thirteen samples in group 2 are interpreted to have crystallisation/eruption ages that are younger (although often within 2.s.d. uncertainties) than their corresponding ID-TIMS values. The remaining sample from this group has no previous age determination. The overall age patterns from both groups suggest that, instead of separate phases of activity at ~143 and 141-140 Ma as previously inferred, magmatic and volcanic activities were continuous (within age analytical uncertainties) over a ~5 Myr period. Direct linkages between several plutonic and volcanic units in this period of activity (e.g. High Island Tuff and the Kowloon Granite) are no longer supported by the age data, and magmatic activity represented by exposed plutons continued until 137.8±0.8 Ma, as with the Mount Butler Granite.  Under CL imagery, a wide variety of zircon textures is evident, indicative of complex processes that operated in the magmatic systems. Zircon trace element data coupled with textural characteristics enable identification of some common petrogenetic processes. Overall, the intra-grain (cores-rims, sector-zoned zircons) and intra-sample variations in trace element abundance and elemental ratios are more significant than the differences between individual samples. Zircon chemistries in samples from both the volcanic and plutonic records indicate that there are two groups of volcanic-plutonic products through the history of the High Island Caldera magmatic system. Two evolutionary models are proposed here to explain these two groups. In the first model, the magmatic system comprises a single domain that fluctuated in temperature through varying inputs of hotter melts (and was randomly tapped). In the second model the intrusive and extrusive products represent interplay of two magmatic domains in the crust, with contrasting characteristics.  Zircon and apatite fission track analyses have been carried out on several of the rocks dated by U-Pb methods (either SIMS or TIMS), together with a selection of other Mesozoic igneous rocks and post-magmatic Cretaceous and Eocene sediments to cover the geographic area of Hong Kong. The fission-track dataset and associated thermal modelling show that the igneous rocks and Cretaceous sediments (but not the Eocene sediments) together experienced post-emplacement or post-depositional heating to >250 ºC, subsequently cooling through 120-60 ºC after ~80 Ma. The heating reflects the combined effects of an enhanced geothermal gradient and burial. The enhanced geothermal gradient is interpreted to represent continuing Yanshanian magmatic activity at depth, without any documented surface eruption products, until ~100-80 Ma. The data also indicate a long-term, slow cooling (~1 ºC/Myr) since the early Cenozoic, linked to ~2-3 km of erosion-driven exhumation. The thermo-tectonic history of Hong Kong reflects the mid-Cretaceous transition of southeast China from an active to a passive margin bordered by marginal basins that formed in the early Cenozoic. The inferred cessation of magmatism at depth below Hong Kong at ~100-80 Ma is broadly coincident with the cessation of plutonic activity in many other circum-Pacific magmatic provinces related to reorganisation of Pacific Plate motion.</p>


1994 ◽  
Vol 31 (12) ◽  
pp. 1727-1743 ◽  
Author(s):  
James E. Evans ◽  
R. John Ristow Jr.

The southeastern outcrop belt of the Eocene Chuckanut Formation contains the erosional remnants of a larger depositional system. In the study area, the Chuckanut Formation can be split into four units based upon differences in age, lithology, sedimentology, paleocurrents, and provenance relationships. The Coal Mountain unit (Early Eocene) represents a southwest-flowing fluvial system that shows no evidence for fault control of drainage. The overlying Higgins Mountain unit (early Middle Eocene) represents a northeast-flowing fluvial system east of the Devil's Mountain fault zone (DMFZ), with lithologies derived from western source areas. The Sperry Peak unit (early Middle Eocene) represents a fluvial system with a wide dispersion of paleocurrent azimuths and a possible mixture of sediment source areas. We believe the Sperry Peak unit was deposited in a fault-wedge graben at the junction of the DMFZ and Straight Creek fault zone (SCFZ), with sediment sources from both east and west. The Grade Creek unit (age unknown) is a fluvial unit found along the trace of the SCFZ with paleo-flow subparallel to the fault zone. The sedimentary evidence suggests that onset of Paleogene faulting on the DMFZ and SCFZ was at about 50–48 Ma, while movement on the Darrington fault zone may have been later (post-42 Ma).


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