2008
DOI: 10.1130/ges00121.1
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Geometry of the Neoproterozoic and Paleozoic rift margin of western Laurentia: Implications for mineral deposit settings

Abstract: The U.S. and Canadian Cordilleran miogeocline evolved during several phases of Cryogenian-Devonian intracontinental rifting that formed the western margin of Laurentia. Recent fi eld and dating studies across central Idaho and northern Nevada result in identifi cation of two segments of the rift margin. Resulting interpretations of rift geometry in the northern U.S. Cordillera are compatible with interpretations of northweststriking asymmetric extensional segments subdivided by northeast-striking transform and… Show more

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Cited by 100 publications
(115 citation statements)
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(152 reference statements)
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“…Concurrent hydrothermal fluid flow and ore deposition along the Getchell, Crescent Valley-Independence and Alligator Ridge mineral trends (Fig. 3) is also interpreted to have been controlled by preexisting, possibly Proterozoic, crustal structures, though the age and nature of the structures remain more ambiguous (Cline et al, 2005;John et al, 2003;Lund, 2008).…”
Section: Edge Of the Proterozoic Cratonmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Concurrent hydrothermal fluid flow and ore deposition along the Getchell, Crescent Valley-Independence and Alligator Ridge mineral trends (Fig. 3) is also interpreted to have been controlled by preexisting, possibly Proterozoic, crustal structures, though the age and nature of the structures remain more ambiguous (Cline et al, 2005;John et al, 2003;Lund, 2008).…”
Section: Edge Of the Proterozoic Cratonmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The western edge of the Laurentian craton was originally defined by the Sr = 0.706 line (Kistler, 1990;Oldow, 1992), but more recent lead and strontium isotopic studies (Crafford and Grauch, 2002;Grauch et al, 2003;Wooden et al, 1998) and sedimentary facies studies (Lund, 2008) have delineated the edge of the craton with a higher degree of detail (Fig. 3).…”
Section: Edge Of the Proterozoic Cratonmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Some workers (Lund 2008;Dehler et al 2010;Balgord et al 2013) suggest that Neoproterozoic rocks of the Windermere Supergroup and its equivalents are rift rocks, but evaporites are unreported, volcanic rocks are very sparse, and overall the rocks are 100-200 Myr older than passive margin subsidence of the North American margin (Bond and Kominz 1984). The lack of such rocks along the entire length of the Cordillera suggests that the rift rocks, along with outer riseslope sedimentary rocks, which are also missing from North America, were not simply displaced by strike-slip faults, but instead torn from the margin during slab failure -a feature readily accounted for in the westerly subduction model, in which North America was attached to a westerly subducting slab, but difficult to reconcile in easterly dipping models (Hildebrand and Bowring 1999;Hildebrand 2009Hildebrand , 2013.…”
Section: Geologymentioning
confidence: 99%