An Analysis of Compositional Variations and Spatial Relationships within Fe-Ni-Cu Sulfide Deposits on the North Range of the Sudbury Igneous Complex

2002 ◽  
Vol 97 (7) ◽  
pp. 1487-1508 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. E. Beswick
2015 ◽  
Vol 50 (9) ◽  
pp. 1577-1594 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denise Anders ◽  
Gordon R. Osinski ◽  
Richard A. F. Grieve ◽  
Derek T. M. Brillinger

2020 ◽  
Vol 57 (11) ◽  
pp. 1324-1336
Author(s):  
D. Anders ◽  
G.R. Osinski ◽  
R.A.F. Grieve ◽  
E.A. Pilles ◽  
A. Pentek ◽  
...  

The 1.85 Ga Sudbury impact structure is considered a remnant of a peak-ring or multi-ring basin with an estimated original diameter of 150 to 200 km. The Offset Dikes are radial and concentric dikes around the Sudbury Igneous Complex (SIC) and are composed of the so-called inclusion-rich Quartz Diorite (IQD) and inclusion-poor Quartz Diorite (QD), and in some Offset Dikes, Metabreccia (MTBX). We carried out a detailed field and analytical investigation of MTBX from the Parkin Offset Dike in the North Range of the Sudbury structure. Our observations suggest that MTBX represents impact breccia that originally formed underneath the Main Mass of the SIC and that was subsequently contact-metamorphosed and entrained during the emplacement of the Parkin Offset Dike. The MTBX bears no resemblance to the QD and IQD in which it is hosted, but it does share many similarities with Footwall Breccia (FWBX), suggesting that the two shared a similar initial origin. A genetic relationship between MTBX and FWBX is also supported by whole rock geochemical analyses.


1994 ◽  
Vol 31 (12) ◽  
pp. 1744-1748 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. T. Chubb ◽  
D. C. Vogel ◽  
D. C. Peck ◽  
R. S. James ◽  
R. R. Keays

Pseudotachylyte bodies were recently identified within and adjacent to the Early Proterozoic East Bull Lake and Shakespeare–Dunlop intrusions, located approximately 25–40 km west-southwest of the western margin of the Sudbury Igneous Complex. These breccia-like bodies locally form extensive vein networks and are preferentially developed along the contact between the intrusions and older Archean granitoid rocks. The pseudotachylyte veins comprise variable proportions of locally derived rock fragments and an aphanitic to fine-grained crystalline matrix that commonly displays flow textures. The veins appear to have formed by intense cataclasis and (or) frictional melting. These occurrences are very similar in appearance to Sudbury Breccia dykes that are observed at a radial distance of up to 80 km from the Sudbury Igneous Complex. Sudbury Breccia is widely believed to have formed as a result of the Sudbury event—a cataclysmic explosion that occurred at 1.85 Ga. The location of the pseudotachylyte veins described herein may coincide with one of the concentric bands of relatively intense Sudbury Breccia development observed to the north of the Sudbury Igneous Complex.


2020 ◽  
Vol 61 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yujian Wang ◽  
C Michael Lesher ◽  
Peter C Lightfoot ◽  
Edward F Pattison ◽  
J Paul Golightly

Abstract The c. 1·85 Ga Sudbury Igneous Complex (SIC) is the igneous remnant of one of the oldest, largest and best-preserved impact structures on Earth and contains some of the world’s largest magmatic Ni–Cu–PGE sulfide deposits. Most of the mineralization occurs in Sublayer, Footwall Breccia and inclusion-bearing quartz diorite (IQD), all of which contain significant (Sublayer and IQD) to minor (Footwall Breccia) amounts of olivine-bearing mafic–ultramafic inclusions. These inclusions have only rare equivalents in the country rocks and are closely associated with the Ni–Cu–PGE sulfide mineralization. They can be divided into three groups on the basis of petrography and geochemical characteristics. Group I (n = 47) includes igneous-textured olivine melanorite and olivine melagabbronorite inclusions in the Whistle and Levack embayments on the North Range with Zr/Y, Zr/Nb, Nb/U and Zr/Hf similar to igneous-textured Sublayer matrix. Group I inclusions are interpreted to be anteliths that crystallized from a mixture of SIC impact melt and a more mafic melt, probably derived by melting of ultramafic footwall rocks. Group II includes Group IIA (n = 17) shock metamorphosed wehrlite and olivine clinopyroxenite inclusions in the Levack embayment and Group IIB (n = 2) shock metamorphosed olivine melanorite inclusions in the Foy Offset on the North Range. Group II inclusions have similar trace element patterns [e.g. negative Th–U, Nb–Ta–(Ti), Sr and Zr–Hf anomalies] and overlapping Nb/U to a layered mafic–ultramafic intrusion in the footwall of the Levack and Fraser deposits, which together with their limited distribution suggests that Group II inclusions are locally-derived xenoliths. Group III (n = 21) includes phlogopite lherzolite and feldspar lherzolite inclusions with igneous, recrystallized and shock-metamorphic textures in the Trill, Levack and Bowell embayments, and the Foy Offset dike on the North Range. They have no equivalents in the exposed country rocks. The calculated parental magma is similar to continental arc basalt formed by approximately 5% partial melting of garnet peridotite. Ol–Cpx–Pl thermobarometry of several Group III inclusions indicate equilibration at 900–1120 ºC and 210 ± 166 MPa to 300 ± 178 MPa, suggesting crystallization in the upper-middle crust (7·7 ± 6·6 to 10·9 ± 6·5 km), prior to being incorporated into the lower parts of the impact melt sheet during impact excavation. The exotic xenoliths provide information about the depth of impact and composition of upper-middle crust in the Sudbury region at 1850 Ma, the local xenoliths provide information about the thermomechanical erosion process that followed generation of the impact melt, the anteliths provide information about the early crystallization history of the SIC, and all of the inclusions provide constraints on the genesis of Sublayer, IQD, footwall breccia, and associated Ni–Cu–PGE mineralization.


2021 ◽  
pp. 104301
Author(s):  
Sarah Hashmi ◽  
Matthew I. Leybourne ◽  
Daniel Layton-Matthews ◽  
Stewart Hamilton ◽  
M. Beth McClenaghan ◽  
...  

1932 ◽  
Vol 69 (5) ◽  
pp. 209-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. D. Osborne

THE Carlingford-Barnave district falls within the boundaries of Sheet 71 of the Ordnance Survey of Ireland, and forms part of a broad promontory lying between Carlingford Lough on the north-east and Dundalk Bay on the south-west. The greater part of this promontory is made up of an igneous complex of Tertiary age which has invaded the Silurian slates and quartzites and the Carboniferous Limestone Series. This complex has not yet been investigated in detail, but for the purposes of the present paper certain references to it are necessary, and these are made below. The prevalence of hybrid-relations and contamination-effects between the basic and acid igneous rocks of the region is a very marked feature, and because of this it has been difficult at times to decide which types have been responsible for the various stages of the metamorphism.


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