scholarly journals U-Pb zircon age and regional setting of the Lapeyrère gabbronorite, Portneuf-Mauricie region, south-central Grenville Province, Quebec; Radiogenic age and isotopic studies: Report 14

2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
L Nadeau ◽  
O van Breemen
1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 299-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Corrigan ◽  
Otto van Breemen

New U–Pb zircon and monazite ages on 12 samples from the Mauricie transect in Quebec provide constraints on the lithologic and tectonic evolution of the south-central Grenville Province. From lowest to highest structural levels, the Mékinac, Shawinigan, and Portneuf – St. Maurice domains are identified on the basis of protolith age, tectonic overprint, and plutonism. The structurally highest Portneuf – St. Maurice domain consists of remnants of an island arc (Montauban Group) that was deformed and metamorphosed before and during the intrusion of continental arc plutons (La Bostonnais complex). A tonalitic orthogneiss yielding a [Formula: see text] zircon age suggests that most of the structurally underlying Mékinac and Shawinigan domains consist of orthogneisses that may be high-grade equivalents of the La Bostonnais complex. A voluminous metasedimentary unit occurring in the Shawinigan domain (St. Boniface unit) was deposited between ca. 1.18 and 1.09 Ga, precluding any correlation with the ca. 1.45 Ga Montauban Group. Two suites of anorthosite–mangerite–charnockite–granite (AMCG) plutonic rocks are identified on the basis of field relationships and isotopic age. A megacrystic granite belonging to the "older" AMCG suite yielded a [Formula: see text] zircon age. Three plutons from the "younger" suite yielded ages of [Formula: see text], 1059 ± 2, and 1056 ± 2 Ma. The Mékinac and Shawinigan domains, excluding the younger AMCG plutons, were penetratively deformed at granulite to uppermost amphibolite facies during west-northwest-directed thrusting between 1.15 and 1.09 Ga. At ca. 1.09 Ga, a transition from contraction to oblique extension resulted in the juxtaposition of the "cold" Portneuf – St. Maurice domain with the "hot" Shawinigan domain, along the Tawachiche shear zone. Oblique extension may have been active from ca. 1.09 to 1.04 Ga and was contemporaneous with emplacement of the younger AMCG suite.


Geology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yvette D. Kuiper ◽  
Christopher Hepburn

Newly compiled U-Pb detrital zircon data from eight geographic domains along the eastern Laurentian margin from Newfoundland (Canada) to Alabama (United States) show a highly consistent signature along strike, with only minor local variations. The Precambrian signature is characterized by a small ca. 2.7 Ga population and a major ca. 1.9–0.9 Ga population that peaks at ca. 1.2–1.0 Ga. Detrital zircon populations are from Laurentian Archean crust (ca. 2.7 Ga population), Paleoproterozoic orogens (ca. 1.9–1.6 Ga), the Granite-Rhyolite Province (ca. 1.5–1.4 Ga), and the Elzevir terrane and Grenville Province (ca. 1.3–0.9 Ga). The Mesoproterozoic populations vary in size depending on proximity to the ca. 1.5–1.4 Ga Granite-Rhyolite Province, the ca. 1245–1225 Ma Elzevir terrane, and the ca. 1.2–0.9 Ga Grenville Province. A middle Ordovician zircon population varies in size along strike depending on input from the Taconic orogenic belt, but it is strongest in the northern Appalachians. Because of the general along-strike consistency in detrital zircon age populations, the compilation of all 7534 concordant U-Pb detrital zircon data can be used in future U-Pb detrital zircon studies as an indicator for eastern Laurentian margin sources.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.R. Fasulo ◽  
et al.

Supplemental Figure S1. Normalized distribution plot of detrital zircon ages from the Kahiltna assemblage of the central Alaska Range (Hampton et al., 2010), the Wellesly basin (this study), and the Kahiltna assemblage of the northwestern Talkeetna Mountains (Hampton et al., 2010). Note that the detrital zircon age distribution of ages older than 500 Ma has 10× vertical exaggeration.


1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (7) ◽  
pp. 1458-1469 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Scott ◽  
N. Machado ◽  
S. Hanmer ◽  
C. Gariépy

The Gilbert River Belt, in the Grenville Province in southeastern Labrador, is a distinctive, west–northwest-trending zone of locally intense deformation and voluminous granitoid plutonism, up to 30 km in width. In an attempt to directly quantify the timing of deformation in ductile shear zones within the belt, rocks interpreted as having been intruded synchronously with ongoing deformation were sampled for U–Pb isotopic analysis. Three of these samples are <2 m wide granitic veins that have sharp intrusive contacts that truncate ductile deformation fabrics, but are themselves deformed at metamorphic conditions similar to their host rocks and are therefore interpreted as having intruded after the initiation of deformation and fabric development, but prior to cessation of this deformation. The first vein is syntectonic with respect to amphibolite-facies deformation and yielded a zircon age of [Formula: see text]. The second vein intruded synchronously with the development of a zone of amphibolite-facies straight gneisses, which defines the southern limit of the Gilbert River belt at [Formula: see text]. The third vein is syntectonic with respect to greenschist-facies deformation and yielded a zircon age of [Formula: see text] and a monazite age of 1078 ± 2 Ma. A sample of the K-feldspar megacrystic granite that underlies much of the belt and is interpreted as having intruded during ongoing amphibolite-facies deformation yielded a zircon age of [Formula: see text]; a mildly deformed granitic vein that crosscuts the megacrystic granite at the same location contained zircon that indicate a [Formula: see text] crystallization age. Monazite from a granodioritic gneiss yielded a concordant age of 1077 ± 3 Ma, interpreted as the time of final cooling during gneiss formation. These results indicate that much of the amphibolite-facies deformation (1664 – 1644 Ma) in the Gilbert River Belt is correlative with the regionally extensive Labradorian orogenic event, whereas greenschist-facies deformation (1113 – 1062 Ma) and monazite growth (1078 Ma) are the result of renewed tectonomagmatic activity during Grenvillian orogenesis.


2005 ◽  
Vol 42 (10) ◽  
pp. 1865-1880 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claude Hébert ◽  
Anne-Marie Cadieux ◽  
Otto van Breemen

In the south-central Grenville Province, Quebec, Canada, anorthosite–mangerite–charnockite–granite (AMCG) magmatism took place during four distinct episodes between 1327 and 1008 Ma. AMCG rocks crosscut several gneiss complexes composed of ~1506 Ma supracrustal rocks and massive to gneissic igneous rocks that were emplaced during two distinct episodes: ~1434 and 1393–1383 Ma. The four episodes of AMCG magmatism are (i) the 1327 ± 16 Ma labradorite-type De La Blache Mafic Plutonic Suite, (ii) the 1160–1135 Ma labradorite- and andesine-type Lac St. Jean Anorthositic Suite, (iii) a 1082–1045 Ma unnamed plutonic suite, and (iv) the 1020–1008 Ma andesine-type Valin Anorthositic Suite. The Valin Anorthositic Suite includes the 1016 ± 2 Ma andesine-type Mattawa Anorthosite, the 1010–1008 Ma andesine-type Labrieville Alkalic Anorthositic Massif, the 1020 ± 4 Ma St. Ambroise Pluton, the 1018+7–3 Ma Farmer Monzonite; the 1010 ± 2 Ma Gouin Charnockite, and the 1010 ± 3 Ma La Hache Monzonite. Study of the Ti–Te–P mineral occurrences in these four AMCG units in the south-central Grenville Province has shown that (i) apatite-bearing rocks are related only to andesine-type anorthosites, (ii) titaniferous magnetite is restricted to labradorite-type anorthosites, and (iii) hemo-ilmenite occurs only in andesine-type anorthosite and associated oxide–apatite-rich gabbronorites (OAGN) and nelsonites.


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