Foxe Platform and Basin Tectono-Sedimentary Element

2021 ◽  
pp. M57-2016-27
Author(s):  
Denis Lavoie ◽  
Nicolas Pinet ◽  
Shunxin Zhang

AbstractThe Foxe Platform and Basin Tectono-Sedimentary Element is an ovoid-shaped, predominantly marine basin located in the Canadian Arctic. The Paleozoic sedimentary succession (Cambrian to Silurian) unconformably overlies the Precambrian basement and reaches a maximum measured thickness of slightly over 500 metres in the only exploration well drilled in this basin. The Lower Paleozoic Foxe Platform and Basin Tectono-Sedimentary Element is surrounded by Precambrian basement and by the Paleozoic Arctic Platform to the north and by the Paleozoic-Mesozoic (?) Hudson Bay Strait Platform and Basin to the south. The Paleozoic succession consists of a Cambrian clastic-dominated interval overlain by Ordovician to lower Silurian predominantly shallow marine carbonate. Other than a single well drilled in the northern part of the basin, no subsurface information is available. Thermally immature Upper Ordovician organic matter rich calcareous black shales have been mapped on the onshore extension of the basin to the southeast. Potential hydrocarbon reservoirs consist of Cambrian porous coarse-grained clastics as well as Upper Ordovician dolostones and reefs.

1986 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 504-526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lewis H. King ◽  
Gordon B. J. Fader ◽  
W. A. M. Jenkins ◽  
Edward L. King

Analyses of seismic reflection profiles supported by lithological and palynological studies of core samples from submarine outcrops indicate that the lower Paleozoic succession of the Avalon Terrane, southeast Newfoundland, is continuous offshore. The succession crops out over an area greater than 30 000 km2 and is approximately 8 km thick. The sequence is dominantly siltstone and is of Late Cambrian to ?Devonian or younger age. It is relatively unmetamorphosed, underlain by Hadrynian acoustic basement, and overlain along its eastern and southern margins by a Mesozoic–Cenozoic succession that is economically important from an oil and gas perspective.Lithofacies studies indicate that in Early Ordovician time restricted shallow-marine conditions probably prevailed over a vast area of the Avalon Terrane. Upper Ordovician and Silurian siltstones show evidence of deposition under more-dynamic and well-oxygenated conditions and probably represent a normal shallow-marine environment. Redbeds of possible Devonian or younger age are interpreted to be of continental origin. Black shales of Ordovician age are potential source rocks for the generation of hydrocarbons.


Author(s):  
И.А. Богуш ◽  
Г.В. Рябов ◽  
В.И. Черкашин ◽  
Н.А. Исаева

Ультрабазиты Северного Кавказа являются древнейшими магматическими породами, возраст которых определяется как нижнепалеозойский (ордовик-силур). Эти породы играют ключевую роль в металлогении благородных металлов Кавказа. С ультрабазитами связаны гигантские запасы металлов в региональной углеродсодержащей девонской черносланцевой толще Северного Кавказа. Практическое значение имеют пермскские пропилиты (Чучкурское месторождение) и металлоносные юрские коры выветривания ультрабазитовых массивов. До настоящего времени не оценены благородные металлы лиственитов Северного Кавказа, сопровождающих ультрабазиты. Цель работы. Показать, что ультраосновные породы являются донорами благородных металлов (Au, Pt, Pd) для Северного Кавказа на протяжении всего фанерозоя. Подтвердить пространственно-временную связь ультрабазитов с благороднометалльным оруденением в черных сланцах Кавказа. Доказать на примере Беденского массива ультрабазитов наличие рудоносной коры выветривания, залегающей на размытой поверхности серпентинитов. Методы исследований. Сделан краткий исторический обзор исследований ультрабазитов с ориентацией на генетические связи благородных металлов (Au, Pt, Pd) с ультрабазитовой магмой. Проведен анализ геологических материалов по наиболее крупным на Северном Кавказе Беденскому и Малкинскому ультрабазитовым массивам - их составу, геохимическим особенностям и потенциальной рудоносности. Результаты работы. По химическому составу ультрабазиты Северного Кавказа отнесены к альпинотипному формационному типу. Установлена рудообразующая роль альпинотипных ультрабазитов для благородных металлов в осадочных и метаморфических толщах фанерозоя региона. Благородные металлы активно проявляются в металлогении фанерозойских геотектонических эпох: каледонской, герцинской, киммерийской и альпийской, имея единый первичный ультрабазитовый источник. Свежие, неизмененные серпентиниты в настоящее время не обнаруживают аномальные содержания благородных металлов, представляющих промышленный интерес. Насыщение серпентинитов благородными металлами проявляется при их экзогенной переработке в обогащенных продуктах их разрушения. Потенциально промышленными осадочными комплексами, состоящими из обогащенных продуктов разрушения серпентинитов, являются коры выветривания серпентинитов и осадочные черносланцевые толщи Северного Кавказа. Ультрабазитовая магма на Северном Кавказе послужила первичным глубинным источником благородных металлов в осадочных и метаморфогенных фанерозойских толщах Кавказа The ultrabasites of the North Caucasus are the oldest igneous rocks, whose age is defined as the Lower Paleozoic (Ordovician-Silurian). These rocks play a key role in the metallogeny of the noble metals of the Caucasus. Huge reserves of metals in the regional carbonaceous Devonian black shale stratum of the North Caucasus are associated with ultrabasites. Permian propylites (Chuchkurskoye deposit) and metal-bearing Jurassic crusts of weathering of ultrabasic massifs are of practical importance. To date, the noble metals of the listvenites of the North Caucasus accompanying ultrabasites have not been evaluated. Aim. Show that ultrabasic rocks are donors of noble metals (Au, Pt, Pd) for the North Caucasus throughout the entire Phanerozoic. Confirm the spatio-temporal relationship of ultrabasic rocks with noble metal mineralization in the black shales of the Caucasus. Prove the presence of an ore-bearing weathering crust on the eroded surface of serpentinites using the example of the Bedensky ultrabasic massif. Methods. A brief historical review of ultrabasite studies with a focus on the genetic relationships of noble metals (Au, Pt, Pd) with ultrabasite magma is made. The analysis of geological materials on the Bedene and Malkin ultrabasite massifs, the largest in the North Caucasus, is carried out - their composition, geochemical features and potential ore content. Results. According to the chemical composition, the ultrabasites of the North Caucasus are attributed to the alpinotype formation type. The ore-forming role of alpinotype ultrabasites for noble metals in sedimentary and metamorphic strata of the Phanerozoic region has been established. Noble metals are actively manifested in the metallogeny of the Phanerozoic Geotectonic epochs: Caledonian, Hercynian, Cimmerian and Alpine, having a single primary ultrabasic source. Fresh, unaltered serpentinites do not currently show anomalous contents of noble metals of industrial interest. The saturation of serpentinite with noble metals is manifested during their exogenous processing in the enriched products of their destruction. Potentially industrial sedimentary complexes consisting of enriched products of destruction of serpentinites are the weathering crusts of serpentinites and sedimentary black-shale strata of the North Caucasus. Ultrabasic magma in the North Caucasus served as the primary deep-seated source of precious metals in sedimentary and metamorphogenic Phanerozoic strata of the Caucasus


1974 ◽  
Vol 111 (6) ◽  
pp. 549-564 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. McCann ◽  
M. J. Kennedy

SummaryConglomerate beds occur in an Upper Ordovician—Lower Silurian clastic sequence on the northeastern side of the Newfoundland Central Paleozoic Mobile Belt. They contain scattered pebbles and cobbles dispersed in a finely laminated sandstone and siltstone matrix. Laminations are generally 5–20 mm thick and the clasts 10–300 mm across. The laminations are locally disrupted by the clasts. These laminations have subsequently been tectonically flattened into augen around the clasts and locally disrupted by boudinage. It is concluded that these conglomerate beds represent icerafted glacio-marine deposits interbedded with turbidites which were probably deposited in a locally restricted marine environment. The deposits are interpreted on the basis of scattered fossil localities as being of Late Ordovician–Early Silurian age. They are compared with deposits of similar age elsewhere in the North Atlantic region.


1962 ◽  
Vol 65 (6) ◽  
pp. 107-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gilbert Kelling

SynopsisThe petrology of a group of geosynclinal rudites and arenites of Upper Ordovician age from the Rhinns of Galloway, south-west Scotland, is described. The rudites are confined to the oldest formation, the Corsewall Group, and consist of pebbly microbreccias and “boulder-beds” interbedded with coarse greywackes and platy siltstones. The composition of the microbreccias and boulder-beds varies little with stratigraphic level.The arenites comprise lithic, coarse-grained greywackes with occasional quartzose or feldspathic varieties. They carry, in aggregate, a wide range of igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary rock-fragments, quartz of variable source, a variety of feldspars, ferromagnesian minerals, micas, chlorites and a common to conspicuous argillaceous matrix. The greywackes are well defined stratigraphically as regards both overall composition and the character of the large mineral grains and rock-fragments (“granules”). Moreover composition appears to be related to grain-size in a consistent manner. The size-distribution, sorting and skewness of the greywackes based on thin section measurements show little stratigraphic variation.The aggregate suite of heavy minerals is meagre and only minor differences exist in the individual formation-suites.The character of the rock-fragments and mineral grains suggests that the earlier formations were derived from a nearby source-area in which plutonic and hypabyssal acid and basic igneous rocks were extensively exposed, together with spilitic lavas and glaucophane schists. The petrology of the upper formations reveals that a metamorphic terrain of Southern Highlands aspect became an important additional source of material. However, the highest beds were derived from a region dominated by andesitic and spilitic tuffs and lavas.The principal directional sedimentary structures are described briefly and it is suggested that the lower part of the Corsewall Group, derived mainly from the north and north-east, was deposited in a sheltered pro-delta environment, but that the boulder-beds and associated rocks were formed within a more boisterous region. The Kirkcolm Group is a turbidite-sequence deposited in a marine trough of moderate depth by currents which at first flowed dominantly in opposing directions, towards either north-east or south-west. However, transport from the north-east became progressively established. The Portpatrick Group is another turbidite-sequence but this formation was deposited by currents flowing from the west or south-west.


2002 ◽  
Vol 76 (5) ◽  
pp. 921-927 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Goldman ◽  
Shannon M. Campbell ◽  
Jeffrey M. Rahl

Graptolites are relatively uncommon fossils in the Middle and Upper Ordovician carbonates of the North American mid-continent. With the notable exception of the Viola Springs Formation in Oklahoma, most units contain a single species, which occur within narrow stratigraphic intervals (often single beds). While uninteresting in terms of their diversity, these monospecific collections commonly yield excellent three-dimensionally preserved specimens that can be isolated from their matrix and studied. In particular, the large number of well-preserved specimens allows for accurate evaluations of intra-specific variation and reliable descriptions of taxa that are generally known from flattened or otherwise distorted material. Additionally, these graptolite collections can provide important biostratigraphic ties between disparate facies—shallow mid-continental limestones and the deeper-water black shales characteristic of continental margins.


1984 ◽  
Vol 148 ◽  
pp. 1-73
Author(s):  
J.M Hurst

A new lithostratigraphic scheme is erected for the uppermost Ordovician and lower Silurian shelf carbonate rocks of Peary Land and Kronprins Christian Land, eastern North Greenland. All carbonate rocks were deposited on a fairly stable shelf which was bordered to the north and east by deep-water basins. The shelf foundered in the latest LIandoverian, terminating carbonate production. Five formations and two members are defined and extend from the uppermost Ordovician (Cincinnatian) to the uppermost LIandoverian, or possibly lowermost Wenlock in the Silurian. Lithostratigraphic units include: Turesø Formation (new) composed of alternating light and dark grey peritidal to shallow subtidal laminated or massive dolomites, cryptalgal laminites and fenestral lime mudstones – uppermost Ordovician (Richmondian, Cincinnatian) to Lower or Middle Llandoverian; Ymers Gletscher Formation (new) composed of light grey peritidal lime mudstones, fenestral lime mudstones and cryptalgal laminites 0150 Lower to Middle Llandoverian; Odins Fjord Formation (new) composed of shallow to deep subtidal dark lime mudstones, wackestones and commonly floatstone and rudstone biostromes – Middle (possibly Lower) to Upper Llandoverian; Melville Land Member (new) composed of light grey peritidal lime mudstones, fenestral lime mudstones and cryptalgal laminites – Middle (possibly Lower) Llandoverian; Bure lskappe Member (new) composed of drowned shelf, dark grey to black laminated lime mudstone with terrigenous mudstone interbeds – Upper Llandoverian; Samuelsen Høj Formation (new) composed of light grey to white reef limestones – uppermost Llandoverian; Harefjeld Formation (new), a faulted, folded and cleaved black lime and terrigenous mudstone unit in eastern Kronprins Christian Land – Ordovician to Silurian (Llandoverian).


Author(s):  
Qian HOU ◽  
Chuanlong MOU ◽  
Zuozhen HAN ◽  
Xiangying GE ◽  
Qiyu WANG

ABSTRACT During the Upper Ordovician–Lower Silurian, chert was widely distributed in the Zhongbao Formation in the eastern part of the North Qilian Orogen. The origin and the tectonic setting of these chert were largely unknown. In order to analyse the material provenance, sedimentary environment, their formation and the tectonic setting, we present petrology and geochemical research on chert samples collected from Shihuigou Section. The evidence provided by radiolarite occurrences, Aluminium (Al)–iron (Fe)–manganese diagram and the silicon(Si)/Si + Al + Fe + calcium ratios suggesting a non-hydrothermal input and the biogenic origin chert. The geochemical features and the petrographic signatures have shown that the chert was also influenced by a terrigenous origin. It is considered that the deposition of the Late Ordovician chert is mainly affected by tectonic collision and volcanic ash events. During the Late Ordovician–Early Silurian transition, huge amounts of volcanic ash were released by massive volcanic activity that fell into the ocean, triggering the proliferation of radiolarians. Finally, in the Late Ordovician–Lower Silurian the tectonic setting of the North Qilian Orogen was not a typical deep-water basin, nor a typical continental margin, but a multi-island deep-water basin, which is closed to the mainland.


2003 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 537-547 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Shepherd ◽  
A. MacGregor ◽  
K. Bush ◽  
J. Wakefield

AbstractThe Fife Field and its smaller satellite the Fergus Field are the southernmost of the cluster of oil fields within the UK Central North Sea. The Fife Field lies at the intersection of four blocks, 31/26a, 31/27a, 39/la and 39/2a. It is a small to moderate size offshore field with reserves of 48.3 MMSTB and is produced by five sub-sea wells through a Floating, Production, Storage, Offloading (FPSO) vessel. The field was discovered in 1991 and the first oil was produced in 1995. The Fergus Field, located in Block 39/2a, is a satellite located 5 km SE of the Fife Field. It is produced by a single well tied-back by a sub-sea flowline to the Fife Field infrastructure. The Fergus Field was discovered in 1994 and first oil was produced in 1996. Reserves are estimated as 11.3 MMSTBThe main reservoir interval in both fields comprises fine-grained, heavily bioturbated, shallow marine shelf sandstones of Upper Jurassic age. Significant volumes of chert and carbonate cements, both banded and nodular, occlude porosity and impart reservoir layering within an otherwise thick sandy, mud deficient reservoir interval. Sandstone porosity is in the range 19-31%. Permeabilities are low in the Fife Field reservoir sandstones, typically less than lOOmD. By contrast, better permeabilities (average 500 mD) are seen in the Fergus Field, where a more proximal shelf sandstone facies is present within the oil leg. Two thin intervals of pebbly, very coarse-grained sandstone are intercalated with the shelf sandstones in the crest of the Fife Field. These may represent submarine toes of fan deltas sourced from an active fault system located to the north of the field. The pebbly sandstones show permeabilities in excess of a Darcy and have caused early water breakthrough problems in production wellsA subsidiary reservoir is present within the Tor Formation of the Chalk Group in the Fife Field, but is not oil bearing within the Fergus Field. This comprises white to grey, intensely bioturbated, stylolitized chalk with an average porosity of 24.5% and an average air permeability of slightly less than a millidarcy. Both the Fife and Fergus Fields are defined by simple four-way dip closure at top Jurassic. An episode of structural inversion at the end of the Jurassic created both structures. The overlying Chalk oil pool in the Fife Field has a trap defined by dip closure on three sides and a probable diagenetic trapping element to the south


2004 ◽  
Vol 175 (6) ◽  
pp. 643-655 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernard Laumonier ◽  
Albert Autran ◽  
Pierre Barbey ◽  
Alain Cheilletz ◽  
Thierry Baudin ◽  
...  

Abstract The deepest Hercynian metamorphic terrains in the Pyrenees and in the nearby Montagne Noire are made up of medium-grade orthogneisses and micaschists, and of high-grade, often granulitic, paragneisses. The existence of a granitic-metamorphic Cadomian basement and of its sedimentary Lower Paleozoic cover was advocated from the following main arguments: (i) a supposed unconformity of the Lower Cambrian Canaveilles Group (the lower part of the Paleozoic series) upon both granitic and metamorphic complexes; (ii) a ca. 580 Ma U-Pb age for the metagranitic Canigou gneisses. A SE to NW transgression of the Cambrian cover and huge Variscan recumbent (“penninic”) folds completed this classical model. However, recent U-Pb dating provided a ca. 474 Ma, early Ordovician (Arenigian) age for the me-tagranites, whereas the Vendian age (581 ± 10 Ma) of the base of the Canaveilles Group was confirmed [Cocherie et al., 2005]. In fact, these granites are laccoliths intruded at different levels of the Vendian-Lower Cambrian series. So the Cadomian granitic basement model must be discarded. In a new model, developed in the Pyrenees and which applies to the Montagne Noire where the orthogneisses appear to be Lower Ordovician intrusives too, there are neither transgression of the Paleozoic nor very large Hercynian recumbent folds. The pre-Variscan (pre-Upper Ordovician) series must be divided in two groups: (i) at the top, the Jujols Group, mainly early to late Cambrian, that belongs to a Cambrian-Ordovician sedimentary and magmatic cycle ; the early Ordovician granites pertain to this cycle; (ii) at the base, the Canaveilles Group of the Pyrenees and the la Salvetat-St-Pons series of the Montagne Noire, Vendian (to earliest Cambrian?), are similar to the Upper Alcudian series of Central Iberia. The Canaveilles Group is a shale-greywacke series with rhyodacitic volcanics, thick carbonates, black shales, etc. The newly defined olistostromic and carbonated, up to 150 m thick Tregurà Formation forms the base of the Jujols Group, which rests more or less conformably on the Canaveilles Group. The high-grade paragneisses which in some massifs underlie the Canaveilles and Jujols low- to medium grade metasediments are now considered to be an equivalent of the Canaveilles Group with a higher Variscan metamorphic grade; they are not derived from metamorphic Precambrian rocks. So, there is no visible Cadomian metamorphic (or even sedimentary) basement in the Pyrenees. However, because of its age, the Canaveilles Group belongs to the end of the Cadomian cycle and was deposited in a subsident basin, probably a back-arc basin which developed in the Cadomian, active-transform N-Gondwanian margin of this time. The presence of Cadomian-Panafrican (ca. 600 Ma) zircon cores in early Ordovician granites and Vendian volcanics implies the anatexis of a thick (> 15 km?) syn-Cadomian series, to be compared to the very thick Lower Alcudian series of Central Iberia, which underlies the Upper Alcudian series. Nd isotopic compositions of Neoproterozoic and Cambrian-Ordovician sediments and magmatites, as elsewhere in Europe, yield Paleoproterozoic (ca. 2 Ga) model-ages. From the very rare occurrences of rocks of this age in W-Europe, it can be envisionned that the thick Pyrenean Cadomian series lies on a Paleoproterozoic metamorphic basement. But, if such a basement does exist, it must be “hidden”, as well as the lower part of the Neoproterozoic series, in the Variscan restitic granulites of the present (Variscan) lower crust. So a large part of the pre-Variscan crust was made of volcano-sedimentary Cadomian series, explaining the “fertile” characteristics of this crust which has been able to produce the voluminous Lower Ordovician and, later, Upper Carboniferous granitoids.


1990 ◽  
Vol 159 ◽  
pp. 1-151
Author(s):  
H.A Armstrong

Samples from Upper Ordovician and Lower Silurian strata of the North Greenland carbonate platform have yielded approximately 16 500 identifiable conodont elements referable to 25 multi-element genera and 71 species and subspecies. A single genus, Pseudobelodella and 17 species and subspecies are new. In addition, 8 informal groups of indeterminate species of Oulodus are described. The Upper Ordovician conodont species can be referred to 'Fauna 12' of the American Midcontinent Province where the presence of Rhipodognathus symmetrius in the late Richmondian is typical of shallow water deposits. The Ordovician-Silurian boundary is difficult to place in this study using conodonts. New conodont zonations are proposed for Lower Silurian shelf and slope biofacies; two new early Llandovery conodont zones are erected in the slope biofacies, the Aspelundia expansa Biozone (?earliest Rhuddanian to early Aeronian) and the Aspelundia fluegeli Biozone (early Aeronian to early Telychian). The Pterospathodus celloni Biozone is shown to be particularly valuable in the correlation of strata of late Llandovery age throughout North Greenland.


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