Structural correlation within the Kapuskasing uplift

1994 ◽  
Vol 31 (7) ◽  
pp. 1081-1095 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. T. Bursnall ◽  
A. D. Leclair ◽  
D. E. Moser ◽  
J. A. Percival

Comparison of progressive deformation and metamorphic history within and between the tectonic domains of the Kapuskasing uplift indicates significant variation in age and style of deformation across this large segment of the central Superior Province; multiple stages of tonalite and granitoid intrusion, melt generation, polyphase diachronous deformation, and likely rapid deep burial of supracrustal rocks collectively produced the complex character of this example of Archean mid to deep crust. At least four Archean deformation phases are recognized, although not all are of regional extent. Dated structural chronology suggests that the locus of the earliest recorded deformations migrated to deeper crustal levels with time. Pre-2680 Ma deformation (local D1–D2) within high-level tonalites is correlated with deformation in the Michipicoten supracrustal belt. The apparent earliest deformational fabrics at deeper crustal levels in the granulite terrane of the Kapuskasing structural zone occurred between 2660 and 2640 Ma. Archean third and fourth phase deformation phases (~ 2667 to ~ 2629 Ma) are present at mid-crustal and deeper levels and deform post-2667 Ma metaconglomerate; these resulted in large-scale folding and subhorizontal ductile shear zones, which seem to represent an important transitional zone that separated a passive upper crust from continued ductile strain at deeper levels.Subsequent uplift of the high-grade rocks was accomplished in multiple stages, initiated prior to 2.45 Ga and likely culminated around 1.9 Ga, although continued movement occurred as late as 1.14 Ga. The Ivanhoe Lake fault zone, along which much of the uplift must have occurred, exhibits some evidence of ductile deep-thrust-related fabrics, but most of the observed structures are brittle to brittle–ductile and steeply inclined. A broad zone of pervasive cataclasis and brittle–ductile shear zones is a characteristic feature of the fault zone throughout its length, and both dextral and sinistral offset are locally present. Clear ground evidence for major transcurrent or thrust displacements, however, has not been recognized.

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Deepak C. Srivastava ◽  
Ajanta Goswami ◽  
Amit Sahay

Abstract Delimiting the Aravalli mountain range in the east, the Great Boundary Fault (GBF) occurs as a crustal-scale tectonic lineament in the NW Indian Shield. The structural and tectonic characteristics of the GBF are, as yet, not well-understood. We attempt to fill this gap by using a combination of satellite image processing, high-resolution outcrop mapping and structural analysis around Chittaurgarh. The study area exposes the core and damage zone of the GBF. Three successive phases of folding, F1, F2 and F3, are associated with deformation in the GBF. The large-scale structural characteristics of the GBF core are: (i) a non-coaxial refolding of F1 folds by F2 folds; and (ii) the parallelism between the GBF and F2 axial traces. In addition, numerous metre-scale ductile shear zones cut through the rocks in the GBF core. The damage zone is characterized by the large-scale F1 folds and the mesoscopic-scale strike-slip faults, thrusts and brittle-ductile shear zones. Several lines of evidence, such as the inconsistent overprinting relationship between the strike-slip faults and thrusts, the occurrence of en échelon folds and the palaeostress directions suggest that the GBF is a dextral transpression fault zone. Structural geometry and kinematic indicators imply a wrench- and contraction-dominated deformation in the core and damage zone, respectively. We infer that the GBF is a strain-partitioned dextral transpression zone.


1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 504-511 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald Doig ◽  
J. Brendan Murphy ◽  
R. Damian Nance

In the Cobequid Highlands of Nova Scotia, low-grade late Precambrian arc-related volcano-sedimentry rocks typical of the Avalon Composite Terrane overlie platformal metasedimentry rocks and are spatially associated with gneisses previously considered to be basement to both these units. U–Pb zircon dates of 580–587 Ma from an orthogneiss and an amphibolite are similar to the U–Pb zircon dates of 580–610 Ma from both syntectonic granites in ductile shear zones and high-level posttectonic plutons that intruded the Avalonian successions. Hence, the gneisses do not represent basement but are an integral part of the Avalonian orogenic cycle. The geochronological data indicate that penetrative fabrics in the gneisses, syntectonic granites, and volcano-sedimentary successions are penecontemporaneous (ca. 580–620 Ma) and not sequential, as previously interpreted. The gneisses have a metamorphic fabric (S1a), crystallized under amphibolite-facies conditions, and may represent the deeper roots of a late Precambrian magmatic arc. Fabrics within the deformed granite gneisses (S1b) are interpreted as reflecting crystallization within active ductile shear zones associated with intra-arc transtension and basin development. Fabrics in the volcano-sedimentary successions (S1c) are associated with deformation of the basin.


1998 ◽  
Vol 35 (7) ◽  
pp. 802-819 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gianreto Manatschal ◽  
David Ulfbeck ◽  
Jeroen van Gool

The Palaeoproterozoic Nagssugtoqidian Orogen in West Greenland represents a mid- to deep-crustal section through a collisional orogen with a complex intrusive, tectonic, and metamorphic history. In the northeastern central part of the orogen, in the Ussuit area, Palaeoproterozoic intrusive and supracrustal rocks are sandwiched between slices of Archaean rocks forming a stack of lithotectonic units. Juxtaposition of these units occurred during west- to northwest-vergent thrusting along ductile shear zones (= D1) associated with a foliation formed at upper amphibolite facies conditions. D1 structures were folded (= FA) and then reactivated and locally omitted by localized east- to east-northeast-vergent extensional ductile shear zones (= D2) at near-peak metamorphic conditions. Shallowly east-plunging, transport-parallel upright folds (= FB) affect but are also truncated by D2 extensional shear zones, suggesting an interplay between FB folding and D2 shearing, compatible with a scenario of overall shortening perpendicular to fold axial surface during simultaneous extension parallel to fold axes. Consequently, the structures preserved in the Ussuit area document a deformation history which results from a change from thrusting to syncollisional extension occurring in mid- to lower crustal levels at peak metamorphic conditions.


1995 ◽  
Vol 250 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 61-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ekkehard Scheuber ◽  
Konrad Hammerschmidt ◽  
Hans Friedrichsen

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
William O. Nachlas ◽  
◽  
Christian Teyssier ◽  
Donna L. Whitney ◽  
Greg Hirth

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