Mesozoic–Tertiary basin models for the Canadian Cordillera and their geological constraints

1977 ◽  
Vol 14 (10) ◽  
pp. 2414-2421 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. H. Eisbacher

Paleogeographic maps for the clastic successions of Early Jurassic, Late Jurassic – Early Cretaceous, and Late Cretaceous – early Tertiary time depict important geologic features that have to be considered in modelling of the Mesozoic sedimentary basins of the Canadian Cordillera. The relative positions of clastic basins, reverse fault zones, and volcanic complexes suggest that the crustal elements underlying the western Cordillera were foreshortened and thickened increasingly from early Mesozoic to early Tertiary. Throughout the late Mesozoic the Canadian Cordillera displayed subdued topography. Uplift was dramatic and possibly of Andean proportions during the latest Eocene and Oligocene. Reconstruction of paleogeography along major right-lateral faults suggests the possibility that old basement trends of the cratonic foreland may have had a profound influence on structures west of the Rocky Mountains. In terms of plate tectonics the Mesozoic basins of the Canadian Cordillera are marginal or possibly intra-arc basins, and cannot be compared easily with the presumed forearc basin containing the late Mesozoic Great Valley Sequence of California.

Author(s):  
Lars Stemmerik ◽  
Finn Dalhoff ◽  
Birgitte D. Larsen ◽  
Jens Lyck ◽  
Anders Mathiesen ◽  
...  

NOTE: This article was published in a former series of GEUS Bulletin. Please use the original series name when citing this article, for example: Stemmerik, L., Dalhoff, F., Larsen, B. D., Lyck, J., Mathiesen, A., & Nilsson, I. (1998). Wandel Sea Basin, eastern North Greenland. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 180, 55-62. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v180.5086 _______________ The Wandel Sea Basin in eastern North Greenland is the northernmost of a series of fault-bounded Late Palaeozoic – Early Tertiary basins exposed along the eastern and northern margin of Greenland (Fig. 1). The basin and the surrounding shelf areas are located in a geologically complex region at the junction between the N–S trending Caledonian fold belt in East Greenland and the E–W trending Ellesmerian fold belt in North Greenland, and along the zone of later, Tertiary, continental break-up. The Wandel Sea Basin started to develop during the Carboniferous as a result of extension and rifting between Greenland and Norway, and Greenland and Spitsbergen (Håkansson & Stemmerik 1989), and was an area of accumulation during the Early Carboniferous – Early Tertiary period. Two main epochs of basin evolution have been recognised during previous studies of the basin fill: an early (late Palaeozoic – early Triassic) epoch characterised by a fairly simple system of grabens and half-grabens, and a late (Mesozoic) epoch dominated by strike-slip movements (Håkansson & Stemmerik 1989). The Mesozoic epoch only influenced the northern part of the basin, north of the Trolle Land fault zone (Fig. 1). Thus the northern and southern parts of the basin have very different structural and depositional histories, and accordingly different thermal histories and hydrocarbon potential. This paper summarises the results of a project supported by Energy Research Program (EFP-94), the purpose of which was to model the Wandel Sea Basin with special emphasis on hydrocarbon potential and late uplift history, and to provide biostratigraphic and sedimentological data that could improve correlation with Svalbard and the Barents Sea. It is mainly based on material collected during field work in Holm Land and Amdrup Land in the south-eastern part of the Wandel Sea Basin during 1993–1995 with additional data from eastern Peary Land (Stemmerik et al. 1996). Petroleum related field studies have concentrated on detailed sedimentological and biostratigraphic studies of the Carboniferous–Permian Sortebakker, Kap Jungersen, Foldedal and Kim Fjelde Formations in Holm Land and Amdrup Land (Fig. 2; Døssing 1995; Stemmerik 1996; Stemmerik et al. 1997). They were supplemented by a structural study of northern Amdrup Land in order to improve the understanding of the eastward extension of the Trolle Land fault system and possibly predict its influence in the shelf areas (Stemmerik et al. 1995a; Larsen 1996). Furthermore, samples for thermal maturity analysis and biostratigraphy were collected from the Mesozoic of Kap Rigsdagen and the Tertiary of Prinsesse Thyra Ø (Fig. 1).


1995 ◽  
Vol 32 (10) ◽  
pp. 1531-1540 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kris Vasudevan ◽  
Frederick A. Cook ◽  
Rolf Maier

Three-dimensional seismic coverage in an approximately 12 km × 12 km area of the southern Monashee metamorphic complex in the south-central portion of the Canadian Cordillera reveals a complex geometry to the Mesozoic–early Tertiary contractional Monashee décollement. Data were acquired as part of the Lithoprobe Southern Canadian Cordillera Transect where two approximately perpendicular lines intersected on the south flank of the Monashee mountains in the hinterland of the Cordillera. Stacks of traces within 100 m × 100 m bins are nominally 6-fold, but range from zero to 108-fold due to the crooked nature of the lines. Both migrated and unmigrated data have been examined for interpretation, but the highly variable data quality and discontinuous reflectivity cause excessive added noise during the migration process.


2011 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 553-566 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martín D. Ezcurra ◽  
Federico L. Agnolín
Keyword(s):  

1973 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 670-678 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. D. Small

Isotopic composition of ore leads from four districts in northeastern Washington has been measured with a precision in the ratios of about 0.1‰. Results indicate that the mineralization in the Marshall Diorites of Pend Oreille County is by a primary type lead with a model age of about 1300 to 1500 m.y. The remainder of the measured leads from Pend Oreille and Stevens Counties have a radiogenic component which could have developed in a closed system during the interval 1370 to about 250 m.y. ago. Leads from Ferry and Okanogan Counties have only slight variations in their isotopic abundances. These latter leads could have been produced by an homogenization of the leads from Pend Oreille and Stevens Counties through the mechanism of a late Mesozoic metamorphism of Mesozoic sedimentary structures in Ferry and Okanogan Counties, these latter sedimentary structures being the products of erosion of rocks in Pend Oreille and Stevens Counties. There is no evidence of an ancient basement structure under Ferry and Okanogan Counties from the data presented herein. The lead isotope composition of the ores from northeastern Washington is compatible with the current concepts of the crustal structure across the Canadian Cordillera.


1973 ◽  
Vol 81 (3) ◽  
pp. 328-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Dimitrijević ◽  
M. N. Dimitrijević

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Hoggard ◽  
Karol Czarnota ◽  
Fred Richards ◽  
David Huston ◽  
Lynton Jaques ◽  
...  

<p>Sustainable development and transition to a clean-energy economy is placing ever-increasing demand on global supplies of base metals (copper, lead, zinc and nickel). Consumption over the next ~25 years is set to exceed the total produced in human history to date, and it is a growing concern that the rate of exploitation of existing reserves is outstripping discovery of new deposits. Therefore, improvements in the effectiveness of exploration are required to reverse this worrying trend and maintain growth in global living standards.</p><p>Approximately 70% of known lead, 55% of zinc and 20% of copper has been deposited between 2 Ga and recent by low temperature hydrothermal circulation in shallow sedimentary basins. These basins are formed by extension and rifting, which are key manifestations of the plate-mode of tectonics. Despite 150 years of research, the relationship between deposit locations and local geological structure is enigmatic and there remains no accurate technique for predicting their distribution at continental scales.</p><p>Here, we show that modern surface wave tomography and recent parameterisations for anelasticity at seismic frequencies can be used to map lithospheric structure, and that sediment-hosted base metal deposits occur exclusively along the edges of thick lithosphere. Approximately 90% of the world's sediment-hosted copper, lead and zinc resources lie within 200 km of these boundaries, including all giant deposits (>10 megatonnes of metal). Incorporation of higher resolution regional seismic studies into global lithospheric thickness models further enhances the robustness of this relationship. </p><p>This observation implies that lithospheric architecture imparted by the plate-mode of tectonics is stable over billion-year timescales, and that there is a genetic link between lithospheric scale  processes and near-surface hydrothermal mineral systems. Our new maps provide an unprecedented global means to identify fertile regions for targeted mineral exploration, and provide a clear economic justification for funding targeted seismic arrays, theoretical advances in imaging techniques, and geodynamic studies that improve our understanding of deep-time plate tectonics.</p>


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