Sheeted Dikes and Brecciated Dike Rocks Within Transported Igneous Complexes Bay of Islands, Western Newfoundland

Sheeted dikes and brecciated dike rocks occur stratigraphically between underlying gabbros and overlying pillowed lavas of the Bay of Islands Complex at Blow-Me-Down Mountain and North Arm Mountain. The dikes trend northwesterly, dip steeply southwest or northeast and are approximately at right angl...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
Main Authors: Williams, Harold, Malpas, John
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 1972
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/e72-105
http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/e72-105
Description
Summary:Sheeted dikes and brecciated dike rocks occur stratigraphically between underlying gabbros and overlying pillowed lavas of the Bay of Islands Complex at Blow-Me-Down Mountain and North Arm Mountain. The dikes trend northwesterly, dip steeply southwest or northeast and are approximately at right angles to the trend of the contacts between major rock units that comprise the complex. Similar dikes and dike breccias occur within other transported slices farther west (Little Port Complex) where they separate foliated gabbros, amphibolites, and sodic granites from adjoining relatively undeformed pillowed lavas.The dikes are metamorphosed but relict textures are everywhere preserved. Actinolite, epidote, chlorite, and zoisite are the commonest metamorphic minerals. Prehnite is abundant in some places and pumpellyite and other minerals of the zeolite facies assemblage are known locally in nearby volcanic rocks. The metamorphism within the dikes and overlying volcanic rocks can be related to depth of burial or geothermal gradient, and it is interpreted as an early hydration of the rocks that occurred in their place of formation at an Early Paleozoic spreading oceanic ridge.Brecciated dike rocks are much more common in places than sheeted dikes and cover an area of approximately 40 mi 2 (64 km 2 ) atop North Arm Mountain. The brecciation is chiefly localized in the dike horizon of the Bay of Islands Complex but it locally affects underlying gabbros and overlying volcanic rocks. In the Little Port Complex, the brecciation also affects foliated gabbros, amphibolites, and sodic granites. There is nothing to suggest that the brecciation is the result of brittle deformation. Rather the textures are comparable to those developed in igneous rocks through gas action or fluidization. The brecciation largely predates metamorphism in the dike rocks and it is therefore also interpreted as a feature related to Early Paleozoic plate accretion.The Bay of Islands Complex is a typical ophiolite suite. Recognition and definition of the ...