U-Pb geochronological constraints on Precambrian stratified units in the Avalon Composite Terrane of Nova Scotia, Canada: tectonic implications

1998 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 222-236 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Duncan Keppie ◽  
D W Davis ◽  
T E Krogh

Concordant U-Pb ages of detrital zircons in several Proterozoic units in the Avalon Composite Terrane of Nova Scotia, along with previously published data, indicate that deposition of low- and high-grade stratified units in the Cobequid Highlands (Gamble Brook Formation) and central Cape Breton Island (variously assigned to the George River Group or George River Metamorphic Suite and the Bras d'Or Gneiss) started after ~977 Ma, extended through a period of volcanic activity between ~694 and 637 Ma, and ended before the ~629-612-600 Ma volcanic activity associated with deposition of the Georgeville and Jeffers groups in the Antigonish and Cobequid highlands, and the East Bay Hills and Coxheath groups in southern Cape Breton Island. These age data, along with U-Pb analyses of metamorphic and igneous zircon and monazite, also constrain three Late Proterozoic tectonothermal events: (i) oblique sinistral ductile shear deformation and greenschist-amphibolite-facies metamorphism probably occurred between ~694 and 629 Ma; (ii) oblique dextral deformation and greenschist-facies metamorphism is bracketed between ~612 and 607 ± 2 Ma; and (iii) low-angle, normal shear deformation associated with low-pressure, high-temperature metamorphism took place at ~553-550 Ma. These three events may record (i) opening and (ii) closing of the Antigonish-Cobequid back-arc basin, followed by (iii) gravitational collapse of the central Cape Breton magmatic arc following cessation of subduction, respectively. The combination of ~700-550 Ma arc magmatism and ~1.3-1.0 Ga concordant detrital zircon ages in the Avalon Composite Terrane suggests provenance in the Amazon craton or Oaxaquia in Mexico.

1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (12) ◽  
pp. 2422-2435 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. L. Currie

Two contrasting metamorphic terranes can be recognized in northwestern Cape Breton Island. One terrane (Pleasant Bay complex) consists of biotite gneiss and quartzite with minor calc-silicate lenses that were metamorphosed in Late Precambrian time (about 550 Ma) and were subsequently intruded by Silurian salic and mafic plutons that were, in turn, deformed and intruded by granite in Devonian time. The other terrane (Jumping Brook complex) consists of volcanogenic and sedimentary schists of probable Silurian age that were metamorphosed in Devonian time. P–T estimates indicate that the older parts of the Pleasant Bay complex were metamorphosed at about 790 °C and 7 kbar (1 kbar = 100 MPa) at low to moderate water fugacities during a major intrusive episode. The Jumping Brook complex exhibits a single progressive metamorphic sequence now disrupted by faulting. P–T conditions during this Devonian (370–390 Ma) metamorphism varied from greenschist (300 °C at <3 kbar) to amphibolite (650 °C at 4 kbar) facies. Metamorphism probably occurred in a thermal dome. The data suggest a moderately deformed basement–cover relation between the Pleasant Bay and Jumping Brook complexes.


2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (11) ◽  
pp. 1165-1178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nabil A. Shawwa ◽  
Robert P. Raeside ◽  
David W.A. McMullin ◽  
Christopher R.M. McFarlane

At Kellys Mountain, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, the late Neoproterozoic Glen Tosh formation (a low-grade metapsammite–metapelite unit of the George River Metamorphic Suite) has been intruded by diorite, granodiorite, and granite plutons, and the diorite hosts a narrow contact metamorphic aureole. New mapping and sampling in the contact aureole reveals that the metasedimentary rocks have reached amphibolite-facies metamorphism resulting in the development of neoformed biotite, muscovite, cordierite, ilmenite, garnet, andalusite, sillimanite, monazite, and spinel within the meta-pelite, a mineral assemblage also found in the Kellys Mountain Gneiss as a result of low-pressure regional metamorphism. Neoformed minerals and the disappearance of foliation defines a contact metamorphic aureole within 300 m of the pluton contacts. Petrographic and microprobe analyses of equilibrium assemblages in metapelitic units of the contact aureole yielded metamorphic pressures of 250 MPa, implying an intrusion depth of ∼9 km, with temperatures ranging from 365 to 590 °C. The presence of earlier-formed andalusite and garnet indicates the rocks may have initially undergone a low-pressure regional metamorphic event prior to contact metamorphism. Monazite in the contact aureole was dated using in-situ U–Pb methods and yielded an age of 480.9 ± 3.7 Ma, interpreted as the time of formation of the contact metamorphic aureole.


2007 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 279-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Mossman ◽  
James D. Duivenvoorden ◽  
Fenton M. Isenor

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
D A Kellett ◽  
S M Barr ◽  
D van Rooyen ◽  
C E White

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