Paleomagnetism of Metamorphic Rocks of Daly Bay and Melville Peninsula, Churchill Structural Province

Studies of metamorphic rocks from the Daly Bay and Melville Peninsula areas of the Churchill Structural Province of the Canadian Shield have yielded two groups of directions. Group A directions (16 sites) from gneisses of basic and intermediate composition have the mean 196°, +55 °(N = 16, k = 39, α...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
Main Author: Park, J. K.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 1973
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/e73-093
http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/e73-093
Description
Summary:Studies of metamorphic rocks from the Daly Bay and Melville Peninsula areas of the Churchill Structural Province of the Canadian Shield have yielded two groups of directions. Group A directions (16 sites) from gneisses of basic and intermediate composition have the mean 196°, +55 °(N = 16, k = 39, α 95 = 6.1°) with a corresponding pole at 12°N, 101°W (k = 27, α 95 = 7°). These rocks are foliated and the average effect of anisotropy on the high coercive force (stable) components is small. Evidence is presented to show that agewise the pole falls within the range of 1250 to 2100 m.y. The pole lies on the apparent polar wander curve for the Canadian Shield in the time range 1425 to 1725 m.y. which defines its age within narrower limits. Since the mean K–Ar age is 1622 ± 30 m.y., the magnetization of Group A may reflect this age. This result shows that metamorphic rocks can be used to provide useful paleomagnetic data. The Group B magnetization, however, derived mainly from acidic gneisses and having a mean direction of 055°, +72 °(N = 8, k = 18, α 95 = 13°) and a pole at 67°N, 009°W very close to the present pole, is probably of recent origin.