Cretaceous remagnetization in the Sylvester Allochthon: limits to post-105 Ma northward displacement of north-central British Columbia

1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (8) ◽  
pp. 1316-1322 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. F. Butler ◽  
T. A. Harms ◽  
H. Gabrielse

The Sylvester Allochthon of the Slide Mountain Terrane in northern British Columbia is a structurally interleaved assemblage of ocean-floor lithologies ranging in age from Late Devonian to Late Triassic. It is the most inboard of oceanic suspect terranes and rests as a vast klippe on miogeoclinal strata of the Cassiar Terrane. The Sylvester Allochton and the Cassiar Terrane lie west of the Northern Rocky Mountain Trench Fault. Both the Sylvester Allochthon and the Cassiar Terrane are intruded by mid-Cretaceous (105 Ma) granite of the Cassiar Batholith. Six oriented cores were collected at each of 12 sites in Guadalupian Parafusulina-bearing limestone of the Sylvester Allochthon at a location 4 km from the batholith. Isothermal remanent magnetization (IRM) acquisition and subsequent thermal demagnetization indicate that pyrrhotite is the dominant ferrimagnetic mineral. Least-squares line fitting to four thermal demagnetization steps between 150 and 310 °C was used to determine the characteristic natural remanent magnetization (NRM) directions that fail the fold test at the 99.5% confidence level. We interpret these observations as indicating that the NRM is a thermoremanent or thermochemical remanent magnetism associated with intrusion of the Cassiar Batholith. The resulting paleomagnetic pole location is latitude = 75.7°N, longitude = 171.7°E, α95 = 8.5°. When compared with the mid-Cretaceous pole for cratonic North America, a small but significant clockwise rotation (R ± ΔR = 23.9 ± 18.1 °) is evident, but poleward translation (p ± Δp = 5.3 ± 9.2°) is not significant at the 95% confidence level. The paleomagnetic results are consistent with geological evidence for moderate (700 km) northward transport of the Cassiar Terrane (along with the previously emplaced overlying Sylvester Allochthon) during mid-Cretaceous to Tertiary dextral transcurrent faulting.

1992 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 486-498 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Cole ◽  
R. F. Butler ◽  
G. E. Gehrels

The Cache Creek terrane is exposed along the length of the Canadian Cordillera and is composed of oceanic strata that are probably, at least in part, exotic to North America. In the northern portion of the Cache Creek terrane near Atlin, British Columbia, paleomagnetic samples were collected from layered Paleozoic rocks at 22 sites (≥ 6 samples/site) on Alfred Butte. Principal component analysis of detailed thermal demagnetization data allowed clear isolation of a characteristic remanent magnetization (ChRM) from 17 of these sites. Blocking temperatures to 680 °C indicate that this magnetization is carried by hematite, and site-mean ChRM directions are determined with α95 < 10° for the majority of sites. On Sentinel Mountain, samples were collected from 16 sites in layered Paleozoic volcanic and chert rocks and from a diabase sill. Thermal demagnetization revealed a ChRM in the chert and volcanic rocks with blocking temperatures to 680 °C, whereas alternating-field demagnetization to 40 mT successfully isolated ChRM in the diabase sill. ChRM directions from four sites involved in a mesoscopic S-fold at Alfred Butte fail the fold test, indicating that the ChRM is a postfolding secondary remagnetization. Tests for relative age of structural tilting and remagnetization are ambiguous, with attendant uncertainties in tectonic interpretations. However, rock-magnetic and geologic constraints argue for a chemical remagnetization of these Paleozoic rocks in Late Triassic to Middle Jurassic time, possibly associated with structural juxtaposition of the Cache Creek and Stikine terranes along the Nahlin fault zone. Although certainly nonunique and speculative, the simplest tectonic interpretation of these paleomagnetic data involves postfolding and posttilting remagnetization during the Early Jurassic in a paleolatitudinal position that approximately agrees with predicted North American paleolatitudes for this time.


1977 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 318-326 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. H. Monger ◽  
B. N. Church

The Takla Group of north-central British Columbia as originally defined contained volcanic and sedimentary rocks of Late Triassic and Jurassic ages. As redefined herein, it consists of three formations in the McConnell Creek map-area. Lowest is the Dewar Formation, composed of argillite and volcanic sandstone that is largely the distal equivalent of basic flows and coarse volcaniclastic rocks of the Savage Mountain Formation. These formations are overlain by the volcaniclastic, basic to intermediate Moosevale Formation. These rocks are Upper Triassic (upper Karnian and lower Norian). They are unconformably overlain by Lower Jurassic rocks of the Hazelton Group.


1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 947-957 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hubert Gabrielse

Five clearly defined terranes, comprising from northeast to southwest, Ancestral North America, Slide Mountain, Quesnellia, Cache Creek, and Stikinia, are the dominant tectonic elements of north-central British Columbia. Stratigraphic, sedimentological, plutonic, metamorphic, and structural data show that the Slide Mountain Terrane evolved as a subduction, accretion, and island-arc complex during Permian time. Sedimentological data hint at the demise of the Slide Mountain and Cache Creek oceanic environments in the Permian or Early Triassic and Late Triassic, respectively. Subduction led to the development of volcanic–plutonic island arcs on Stikinia, Quesnellia, and locally on the Cache Creek Terrane in Late Triassic to Middle Jurassic time. Marked inter- and intra-terrane contraction in the Middle Jurassic resulted in the south westward thrusting of the Cache Creek Terrane onto Stikinia, the subsequent development of the Bowser Basin on Stikinia, and possible coeval culmination of the emplacement of Quesnellia and the Slide Mountain Terrane onto Ancestral North America. Deformation, metamorphism, and plutonism along the western margin of Ancestral North America closely followed these events. Contraction was succeeded by a dextral strike-slip regime during the mid-Cretaceous accompanied by the intrusion of voluminous potassic, silica-rich granitic rocks in Ancestral North America. The emplacement of Early to mid-Cretaceous plutons postdated the development of broad, open, regional anticlinoria and synclinoria, perhaps during Early Cretaceous time. The plutonic episode coincided approximately with initiation of the Sustut Basin. Dextral strike-slip faulting further disrupted Ancestral North America until post-Eocene time.


1957 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Gregson

Tick paralysis continues to be one of the most baffling and fascinating tickborne diseases in Canada. It was first reported in this country by Todd in 1912. Since then about 250 human cases, including 28 deaths, have been recorded from British Columbia. Outbreaks in cattle have affected up to 400 animals at a time, with losses in a herd as high as 65 head. Although the disease is most common in the Pacific northwest, where it is caused by the Rocky Mountain wood tick, Dermacentor andersoni Stiles, it has lately been reported as far south as Florida and has been produced by Dermacentor variabilis Say, Amblyomma maculatum Koch, and A. americanum (L.) (Gregson, 1953). The symptoms include a gradual ascending symmetrical flaccid paralysis. Apparently only man, sheep, cattle, dogs, and buffalo (one known instance) are susceptible, but even these may not necessarily be paralysed.


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