1989
DOI: 10.1130/spe228-p229
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The Macon Complex; An ancient accretionary complex in the southern Appalachians

Abstract: The Macon Complex, which extends from eastern Alabama to northern North Carolina, is a late Precambrian-Middle Cambrian accretionary complex comparable in size to the Franciscan Complex of California and Oregon. Much of the complex is tectonic, sedimentary, and metamorphic chaos, properly termed mélange, where wellrounded to angular fragments, blocks, and slabs of contrasting metamorphic grades, different igneous parentages, drastically different sedimentary facies, and different degrees of deformation "float"… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Because of the deep weathering, the distribution of much of the rock types within the terrane is uncertain. However, since this terrane is along strike with the Macon melange (Higgins and Crawford, 1985) to the southwest, it is probably also a melange. Like the Young Harris slice, these rocks are probably derived from ocean crust or a midocean ridge.…”
Section: Mafic-ultramafic Thrust Sheetmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because of the deep weathering, the distribution of much of the rock types within the terrane is uncertain. However, since this terrane is along strike with the Macon melange (Higgins and Crawford, 1985) to the southwest, it is probably also a melange. Like the Young Harris slice, these rocks are probably derived from ocean crust or a midocean ridge.…”
Section: Mafic-ultramafic Thrust Sheetmentioning
confidence: 99%