Rb/Sr Ages and a profile of initial Sr87/Sr86 ratios for plutonic rocks across the Yukon Crystalline Terrane

1976 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 319-330 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. C. Le Couteur ◽  
D. J. Tempelman-Kluit

Nine Rb/Sr apparent ages are reported for igneous rocks of the Yukon Crystalline Terrane. The oldest age (144 m.y.) is from the Triassic? Klotassin quartz diorite and is thought to be a hybrid age that probably reflects the effects of younger intrusives on rocks at least 190 m.y. old. Five ages of about 100 m.y. presumably reflect the cooling of the Coffee Creek quartz monzonite. K/Ar ages for this event are slightly younger than the Rb/Sr ages, suggesting slow cooling. Rb/Sr ages of 53 and 67 m.y. were obtained for the Ruby Range batholith and an age of 61–67 m.y. for the Nisling Range alaskite. The Rb/Sr ages obtained generally confirm recently determined K/Ar ages. There is a regional decrease in initial Sr87/Sr86 ratios, southwestward across the Yukon Crystalline Terrane. This may mean that Precambrian rocks extend under the Yukon Crystalline Terrane, but are absent under the adjoining Coast Plutonic Complex.


1979 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 1166-1175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jo Anne Nelson

The western margin of the Coast Plutonic Complex, one of the major tectonic boundaries of the Canadian Cordillera, has been variously interpreted as an intrusive contact, a shear zone, and a suture zone joining the Early Mesozoic Insular Belt to the North American continent. A representative section of this boundary, exposed on islands in Johnstone Strait, is an intrusive contact along which a quartz diorite with peripheral mafic phases truncates Early Mesozoic sediments and volcanics of the Insular Belt. Concordant hornblende–biotite pairs and two whole rock biotite isochrons date the intrusion as Late Jurassic (151 Ma). Prior to intrusion the stratified units underwent prehnite–pumpellyite facies metamorphism and west-northwest block faulting.The contact aureole of the quartz diorite and its associated mafic phases involves greenschist and hornblende–hornfels facies assemblages. Total pressure in the upper Karmutsen Formation during contact metamorphism was less than 2.5 × 105 kPa. The maximum contact temperature was between 670 and 700 °C. Forcible emplacement of the intrusion caused penetrative deformation of wall rocks in the inner aureole. The maximum contact temperatures indicate that the plutonic bodies were at near-liquidus temperatures when emplaced.The contact on Hardwicke and West Thurlow Islands appears representative of most of the tectonic boundary between the southern Coast Plutonic Complex and the Insular Belt. The western margin of the Coast Plutonic Complex is thus a Late Mesozoic magmatic front, the western limit of the intense magmatism that generated the Coast Plutonic Complex. The formation of Georgia Depression over the province boundary was a later event, coeval with major uplift of the Coast Plutonic Complex.



1975 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 1895-1909 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Tempelman-Kluit ◽  
R. K. Wanless

Forty-four new potassium–argon age determinations on minerals of metamorphic and igneous rocks from the Yukon Crystalline Terrane define the timing of the three most recent thermal events affecting this region. The oldest, 160 to 170 Ma ago, involved weak retrograde metamorphism of igneous and metamorphic rocks and coincides with the intrusion of batholiths of pink quartz monzonite. The next event, 90 to 100 Ma ago, reflects the emplacement of batholiths of the Coffee Creek quartz monzonite suite. The youngest thermal episode, 50 to 60 Ma ago, marks the time when the Nisling Range alaskite, with its porphyry dyke swarms and explosive acid volcanic rocks, was emplaced and when the K–Ar system of the Ruby Range Batholith was thermally reset. The data provide a younger limit to the age of the oldest Mesozoic plutonic rocks, the Klotassin suite, but they do not define its time of emplacement.



Tectonics ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 343-361 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. L. Crawford ◽  
L. S. Hollister ◽  
G. J. Woodsworth


1996 ◽  
Vol 133 (5) ◽  
pp. 573-582 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. P. Skjerlie ◽  
H. Furnes

AbstractThe transition zone between 100 % dykes and high-level plutonic rocks of the Solund-Stavfjord Ophiolite Complex is complex due to the existence of many lithologies with different and variable contact relationships. The rocks of the plutonic complex vary in composition from FeTi basaltic to quartz dioritic, and the grain sizes vary from fine to pegmatitic. Felsic varieties are produced by fractional crystallization of basaltic magma as demonstrated by geochemical evolution and by gradual transition from gabbro to quartz diorite. Patches of fractionated dioritic rocks may show both gradual and intrusive relationships with the surrounding host gabbro. This demonstrates that late-stage liquids commonly left the source region and locally intruded the surrounding parent rocks. The high-level plutonic rocks are thoroughly epidotized and are cut by dykes consisting of granoblastic epidote and quartz. The high-level plutonic complex is associated with irregular bodies of fine- to medium-grained plagioclase-porphyritic diabase of high MgO content. These diabase bodies are intruded by dykes that become progressively more regular in shape. The plutonic complex locally shows intrusive relationships with the overlying 100% dyke complex, but is itself cut by two dyke swarms. The dykes of the first swarm formed while the plutonic complex experienced sinistral shear strain, and the dykes are generally less regular and thinner than the dykes of the second swarm. This indicates that the dykes of the first swarm intruded while the rocks of the plutonic complex were still hot, while the next dyke swarm intruded later when the rock complex was colder. Dykes of both swarms range in composition from slightly to strongly fractionated, suggesting that the magma chambers they were expelled from underwent significant fractionation in between magma replenishment. Numerous dykes of both swarms carry large quantities of glomeroporphyritic aggregates of plagioclase and altered clinopyroxene, indicating that the source area to the dykes very often was a crystal mush.



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 ◽  
...  


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.



1984 ◽  
Vol 21 (9) ◽  
pp. 1033-1049 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald J. White ◽  
Ron M. Clowes

The Strait of Georgia, a topographic depression between Vancouver Island and the mainland of British Columbia, is considered to be the boundary between two tectonic provinces: the Coast Plutonic Complex on the east and the Insular Belt to the west. The allochthonous nature of the Insular Belt has been established, mainly on the basis of paleomagnetic measurements. Various tectonic models to explain the geological differences between the two provinces have been proposed. One of these suggests that the boundary is an old transform fault zone and is represented currently by a thrust fault along the eastern side of the Strait of Georgia. Other models propose that the Coast Plutonic Complex is a feature superimposed by tectonic and metamorphic events after the accretion of the Insular Belt. Such models do not require a major crustal discontinuity along the Strait of Georgia.In May 1982, a seismic refraction survey using a 32 L air gun and a radio telemetering sonobuoy system was carried out in the Strait of Georgia with the objective of investigating the nature of this boundary and determining the upper crustal structure. Three reversed profiles across the strait were shot; these are supplemented by several high-resolution reflection profiles from previous experiments. Two-dimensional models of the crustal structure across the strait have been constructed using a forward modelling ray trace and synthetic seismogram algorithm to match the travel times and amplitude characteristics of the data.Three basic layers or strata form the models, for which the maximum depth of reliability is 3 km. The first layer consists of unconsolidated sediments and Pleistocene glacial deposits, and the second represents Late Cretaceous – early Tertiary basin fill sediments that form the Nanaimo Group, the Burrard–Kitsilano formations, and the Chuckanut Formation. The third layer is likely the extension of the Coast Plutonic Complex beneath the strait, but the westerly limit of this unit is undetermined because of seismic properties similar to those of the Insular Belt volcanics. A local fault is located ~15 km northeast of Galiano Island on the west side of the strait. However, our study shows no evidence for a major fault along the strait. Thus those aspects of tectonic models that require the existence of a major transform or transcurrent fault boundary along the Strait of Georgia. may have to be revised.



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