Geochronology of the Twillingate Granite and Herring Neck Group, Notre Dame Bay, Newfoundland

1976 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 1591-1601 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harold Williams ◽  
R. D. Dallmeyer ◽  
R. K. Wanless

Zircons from the Twillingate Granite form a linear array with a concordia intercept of 510 + 17 – 16 m.y. Mafic dikes that cut deformed granite along the southern contact of the pluton at New World Island record 40Ar/39Ar hornblende ages of 440 ± 10 and 473 ± 9 m.y. These ages indicate that the mafic dikes are Ordovician, and confirm their correlation with mafic volcanic rocks of the nearby Herring Neck Group. The dates also suggest that Herring Neck volcanism and mafic dike intrusion extended from Early to Late Ordovician. Together with the zircon age, they define a narrow chronologic bracket for intrusion, deformation, and metamorphism of the Twillingate Granite (`~510–475 m.y.).Within the central portion of the Twillingate pluton. a metamorphosed mafic dike cutting massive granite and an amphibolite inclusion within Foliated granite yield similar,40Ar/39Ar hornblende ages of 443 ± 11 and 438 ± 9 m.y. These ages are anomalously young compared with the 473 m.y. age of a mafic dike cutting deformed granite at New World Island. They are interpreted to indicate prolonged metamorphism and/or slower post-meta mo rphic cooling for central portions of the pluton compared to its southern margin.The isotopic ages support the view that the Twillingate Granite and nearby mafic volcanic rocks are collectively part of a single island-arc complex. The granite may have been generated during a period of subduction as sociated with plate convergence and closing of the proto-Atlantic ocean. A 510 m.y. (Late Cambrian) age for the granite suggests that convergence began rather early in the evolution of the Northern Appalachians. In addition, where dated Newfoundland ophiolite suites appear to be younger than, or contemporaneous with some granitic plutons (such as Twillingate), it is likely that they formed in a marginal ocean basin environment behind an older island-arc terrane.Les zircons du granite de Twillingate forment un réseau linéaire avec intercept à 510 + 17 – 16 Ma. Les dykes mafiques qui recoupent le granite déformé le long de la bordure sud du pluton à New World Island donnent des âges 40Ar/39Ar pour la hornblende de 440 ± 10 et de 473 ± 9 Ma. Ces âges indiquent que les dykes mafiques sont Ordoviciens et confirment leurs liens avec des roches mafiques volcaniques du groupe de Herring Neck dans le voisinage. Les dates suggèrent aussi que le volcanisme de Herring Neck et l'intrusion de dykes mafiques se sont produits du début à la fin de l'Ordovicien. Avec les âges des zircons, ils définissent un intervalle de temps assez court pour l'intrusion, la déformation et le métamorphisme du granite de Twillingate (~510–475 Ma).A l'intérieur de la portion centrale du pluton de Twillingate, un dyke mafique métamorphisé recoupant un granite massif et une inclusion d'amphibolite dans un granite foliacé donnent des âges 40Ar/39Ar semblables pour les hornblendes de 443 ± 11 et 438 ± 9 Ma. Ces âges sont anormalement faibles si on les compare avec l'âge de 473 Ma du dyke mafique qui recoupe le granite déformé de New World Island. On les interprète comme indiquant un métamorphisme prolongé et/ou un refroidissement post-métamorphique plus lent pour les portions centrales du pluton par comparaison à sa bordure sud.


2021 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 21-28
Author(s):  
Thanh Xuan Ngo ◽  
Hau Vinh Bui ◽  
Hai Thanh Tran ◽  
Binh Van Phan ◽  
Hanh Hong Thi Nguyen ◽  
...  

The gabbro and plagiogranite magmas of the Ngoc Hoi and Dieng Bong complexes are mainly distributed in the northern part of the Kon Tum block. They were previously considered parts of the Tam Ky - Phuoc Son ophiolite complex. In this study, 02 samples of gabbro and plagiogranite were collected from the Hiep Duc area. Petrographic characteristics showed that the rocks were highly foliated and weakly metamorphosed; the schist formed after the crystallization of the rocks. U - Pb zircon age dating from the gabbro rocks as 497.7±1.4 Ma, similar to the plagiogranite age of 498.0±1.3 Ma. The available results in the northern Kon Tum block and Laos indicate the existence of magma series formed during the Late Cambrian period that is probably extended from the northern Kon Tum block to the northeastern part of Laos. The research results on the northern Kon Tum block also confirmed two types of magma in the area: island - arc magma complex and ophiolite type magma complex.



1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 1175-1184 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. R. Dunning ◽  
B. F. Kean ◽  
J. G. Thurlow ◽  
H. S. Swinden

Volcanic groups of the Central Mobile Belt of the Newfoundland Appalachians have previously been subdivided into "early" and "late" arc sequences, separated in time by a quiescent Caradocian stage defined in some areas by fossil-bearing black shales.New U–Pb zircon ages of [Formula: see text] and 473 ± 2 Ma for rhyolites of the Buchans and Roberts Arm groups, respectively, show them to be correlative early Ordovician sequences. These ages serve to refute both the previous Rb–Sr whole-rock isochron ages of 447 Ma and the idea that these groups were "late arc" sequences. These new ages corroborate evidence from late Arenig – early Llanvirn conodonts in the Buchans Group and calibrate this fossil occurrence.A new U–Pb zircon age of 479 ± 3 Ma from plagiogranite of the Mansfield Cove Complex immediately west of the Roberts Arm Group shows that this plutonic body is only slightly older than the adjacent volcanic rocks and not Hadrynian as previously supposed. Local field relationships suggest this body may represent part of a disrupted ophiolite. It is coeval with the ophiolitic Annieopsquotch Complex along a strike to the south and may form part of a belt of rocks derived from early Ordovician ocean floor that is discontinuously exposed along the western boundary of the Buchans – Roberts Arm Belt.Zircons from rhyolite at the northeast termination of the Tulks Hill volcanics, part of the extensive Victoria Lake Group, give an age of [Formula: see text]. This dated sequence contains limestone previously dated as Llanvirn–Llandeilo by conodonts. This part of the group is therefore younger than the Buchans Group, and the designations "early" and "late" arc are not appropriate. The thrusting that juxtaposed these groups is no longer constrained to be of Silurian age but could have been middle to late Ordovician. Precambrian zircons included in the Victoria Lake Group rhyolite could have been incorporated from associated sedimentary rocks and suggest that the group may have formed in a tectonic setting transitional between oceanic and continental and received detritus from several sources.



Author(s):  
I. D. Sobolev ◽  
A. N. Shadrin ◽  
V. A. Rastorguev ◽  
D. A. Kozyreva

In the Schuchinskaya Zone of the Polar Urals granitoids of the Rechnoy and Yalya-Pe paleovolcanoes have been studied. They were mapped as Khoimpeysky Complex of Silurian age. In addition, granitoids of the Nganotsky-1 and Nganotsky-2 plutons mapped as Yunyaginsky Complex of Early Devonian age have been investigated. It was found that based on the mineral and chemical composition the rocks of all plutons studied correspond to island arc I-type granitoids. U-Pb (SIMS) concordant ages of zircons from granitoids of the Rechnoy and Yalya-Pe paleovolcanoes, and of the Nganotsky-1 pluton are 456±6, 454±4 and 463±3 Ma, respectively, which implies the existence of an island arc in the Schuchinskaya Zone as early as the Middle-Late Ordovician. Establishing the age of granitoids allows to refer volcanic rocks cut by plutons to Syadayskaya Formation, and to clarify the upper stratigraphic limit of its sedimentation as Middle-Upper Ordovician.



1983 ◽  
Vol 73 (4) ◽  
pp. 205-219 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. P. Searle

ABSTRACTThe Tibetan–Tethys zone of the Zanskar Himalaya shows a complete Mesozoic shelf carbonate sequence overlying metamorphic basement of the Central crystalline complex and Palaeozoic sedimentary rocks. Continental rifting in the Permian produced the alkaline and basaltic Panjal volcanic rocks and by Triassic time a small ocean basin was developed in the Indus-Tsangpo zone. Stable sedimentation continued until the Middle-Late Cretaceous when a thick sequence of tholeiitic to andesitic island arc lavas (Dras arc) were erupted in the basin above a N-dipping subduction zone. The Spontang ophiolite was emplaced southwards onto the Zanskar shelf edge during latest Cretaceous or earliest Tertiary times.Following emplacement of the Spontang ophiolite, deep-sea sedimentation ended abruptly with initial collision between the Indian plate and the Dras island arc. Emplacement of the massive Ladakh (Trans-Himalayan) batholith along the southern margin of Tibet in late Cretaceous-Eocene time occurred by crustal melting as a result of northward subduction of Mesozoic oceanic crust along the Indus subduction zone. Southward-directed thrusting in both Zanskar and Indus zones accompanied ocean closure during the late Cretaceous–Eocene. Late Tertiary compression caused intense folding, overturning and a phase of northward-directed thrusting along the Indus suture zone and the northern margin of the Tibetan–Tethys zone, resulting in a large amount of crustal shortening.



2003 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 319-330 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. F. Carr ◽  
C. L. Fergusson ◽  
J. W. Pemberton ◽  
G. P. Colquhoun ◽  
S. I. Murray ◽  
...  


Lithos ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 290-291 ◽  
pp. 228-252 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yamirka Rojas-Agramonte ◽  
Ian S. Williams ◽  
Richard Arculus ◽  
Alfred Kröner ◽  
Antonio García-Casco ◽  
...  


2016 ◽  
Vol 113 (25) ◽  
pp. 6945-6948 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luis A. Buatois ◽  
Maria G. Mángano ◽  
Ricardo A. Olea ◽  
Mark A. Wilson

Contrasts between the Cambrian Explosion (CE) and the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE) have long been recognized. Whereas the vast majority of body plans were established as a result of the CE, taxonomic increases during the GOBE were manifested at lower taxonomic levels. Assessing changes of ichnodiversity and ichnodisparity as a result of these two evolutionary events may shed light on the dynamics of both radiations. The early Cambrian (series 1 and 2) displayed a dramatic increase in ichnodiversity and ichnodisparity in softground communities. In contrast to this evolutionary explosion in bioturbation structures, only a few Cambrian bioerosion structures are known. After the middle to late Cambrian diversity plateau, ichnodiversity in softground communities shows a continuous increase during the Ordovician in both shallow- and deep-marine environments. This Ordovician increase in bioturbation diversity was not paralleled by an equally significant increase in ichnodisparity as it was during the CE. However, hard substrate communities were significantly different during the GOBE, with an increase in ichnodiversity and ichnodisparity. Innovations in macrobioerosion clearly lagged behind animal–substrate interactions in unconsolidated sediment. The underlying causes of this evolutionary decoupling are unclear but may have involved three interrelated factors: (i) a Middle to Late Ordovician increase in available hard substrates for bioerosion, (ii) increased predation, and (iii) higher energetic requirements for bioerosion compared with bioturbation.



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