Late Paleozoic assembly of the AlexanderWrangellia-Peninsular composite terrane is recorded by two phases of regional deformation, metamorphism, and magmatism within basement complexes of the Alexander (Craig and Admiralty subterranes), Wrangellia, and Peninsular terranes in the Canadian and Alaskan Cordillera. New secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) and chemical abrasionisotope dilution-thermal ionization mass spectrometry (CA-ID-TIMS) zircon U-Pb ages, whole-rock major-and trace-element and Nd-Sr isotope geochemical compositions, and geological fi eld observations of late Paleozoic igneous rocks were used to identify the precise timing and signifi cance of this tectonism in the Saint Elias Mountains region of southwestern Yukon and eastern Alaska. Middle to Late Pennsylvanian (301-307 Ma) igneous rocks, herein assigned to the Barnard Glacier suite, were preferentially emplaced along the Wrangellia-Craig subterrane boundary and mainly comprise syenitic plutons that intrude Paleozoic country rocks with evidence of Pennsylvanian or older (D1) deformation. We propose that Barnard Glacier suite magmatism was produced by a slab breakoff event after the consumption of a narrow backarc ocean basin and early Pennsylvanian collision between the WrangelliaPeninsular arc and Craig subterrane passive margin. Early Permian (284-291 Ma) dioritic to granodioritic rocks, herein assigned to the Donjek Glacier suite, comprise the vestiges of an extensive magmatic system within the Craig subterrane of southwestern Yukon and southeastern Alaska. The available data suggest that the Donjek Glacier suite represents part of a short-lived, Early Permian arc that initiated along the outboard margin of the Craig subterrane-Wrangellia-Peninsular block after Pennsylvanian collision and slab breakoff. At two fi eld localities in southwestern Yukon, Paleozoic country rocks with D1 fabrics are also intruded by sills and dikes of the Donjek Glacier suite that show evidence of ca. 285 Ma regional deformation and metamorphism (D2). Field evidence for Early Permian tectonism in the Saint Elias Mountains implies direct connections with coeval deformation and metamorphism in the Admiralty subterrane, a microcontinent in the Admiralty Island region of southeastern Alaska that developed separately from the Craig subterrane prior to the Early Per mian. D2 tectonism was likely related to the entry of the Admiralty subterrane margin into the Early Permian subduction zone, which resulted in collision and fi nal amalgamation of the Alexander-Wrangellia-Peninsular composite terrane. Our tectonic scenarios require the currently accepted confi guration of the Alexander terrane (com posite of the Craig and Admiralty subterranes) to have only existed after the Early Permian collision between the Admiralty subterrane and the previously assembled Craig subterrane-Wrangellia-Peninsular terrane. Biogeographic and other geological data suggest that the two-part assembly of the AlexanderWrangellia-Peninsular composite terrane took place along a convergent margin t...
In the pre-Silurian lithotectonic units of the northern Vermont Appalachians, the timing of orogenesis and tectonometamorphism has traditionally been ascribed to the combined effects of the Middle Ordovician Taconian orogeny and Middle to Late Devonian Acadian orogeny. However, numerous geo chronological studies throughout the Northern Appalachians, including neighboring southern Quebec, have obtained Silurian and Early Devonian age data that document more or less continuous tectonometamorphic activity throughout the Ordovician-Devonian. The structural and metamorphic evolution of northern Vermont can be separated into three regional phases, which are characterized by distinct structures, fabrics, and metamorphic parageneses. The fi rst phase (D 1 ), associated with westward emplacement of various thrust slices leading to crustal thickening and regional metamorphism, and the second phase (D 2 ), characterized by bivergent structures and metamorphic overprint, have both been considered to be Taconian. The third phase, the structure and fabric of which are also observed in the Silurian-Devonian rocks to the east, is considered to be Acadian. We present new step-heating and spot fusion 40 Ar/ 39 Ar geochronological data on amphibole and fabric-forming muscovite from samples taken across the Green Mountain anticlinorium, which, coupled with published data, provide improved age constraints on tectonometamorphism of D 1 (latest Cambrian to Middle Ordovician), D 2 (Silurian-Early Devonian), and D 3 (Middle Devonian) events. By comparing structural and metamorphic characteristics, and now timing, these phases are interpreted to be correlative to the tripartite tectonometamorphic evolution documented in southern Quebec, and they further exemplify the along-strike diachronism of tectonism induced by the inherited irregular geometry of the Laurentian margin. Ar-Ar age Castonguay et al. (2007) Ar-Ar ageCambrian and Ordovician ophiolitic and suprasubduction zone metamorphosed magmatic and associated metasedimentary rocks from a peri-Laurentian arc system.Ordovician ophiolitic and suprasubduction zone metamorphosed magmatic and associated metasedimentary rocks from a peri-Gondwanan arc system. Proterozoic Grenville basement of Laurentia.Silurian to Devonian syn-Acadian metasedimentary rocks and associated metaigneous rocks.Neoproterozoic to Cambrian rift-related clastic metasedimentary rocks and associated metavolcanic rocks.Middle Devonian granitic rocks. Mesozoic intrusive rocks.Cambrian and Ordovician clastic and carbonate platform rocks overlain by Middle to Upper Ordovician Taconic clastic wedge rocks.Neoproterozoic-Ordovician Iapetan drift facies continental slope and rise metasedimentary and associated metaigneous rocks.
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