NEW INSIGHTS INTO THE NEOPROTEROZOIC GEOLOGY OF THE CENTRAL AVALON PENINSULA (PARTS OF NTS MAP AREAS 1N/6, 1N/7 and 1N/3), EASTERN NEWFOUNDLAND

New mapping and geochronological studies of the central Avalon Peninsula reveal a geological record of protracted and episodic volcanicity, having varied composition, lithofacies, and depositional environments, spanning a period of 160 Ma in the late Neoproterozoic. Deposition of these disparate vol...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S. J. O'brien, G. R. Dunning, B. Dubé, C. F. O'driscoll, B. Sparkes, S. Israel, J. Ketchum
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.462.3308
http://www.nr.gov.nl.ca/nr/mines/geoscience/publications/currentresearch/2001/obrien_s.pdf
Description
Summary:New mapping and geochronological studies of the central Avalon Peninsula reveal a geological record of protracted and episodic volcanicity, having varied composition, lithofacies, and depositional environments, spanning a period of 160 Ma in the late Neoproterozoic. Deposition of these disparate volcanic successions was punctuated by both marine and terrestrial sedimentation, and by the emplacement, uplift and erosion of intrusive suites of differing age and composition. The new data clearly demonstrate, for the first time, that volcanic rocks previously included within the Harbour Main Group cannot be cat-egorized as a single lithostratigraphic unit of group status. These Neoproterozoic rocks are described below in a framework of six lithostratigraphically and chrono-stratigraphically discrete units that can be mapped on a regional scale. A seventh volcanic unit occurs east of the Topsail Fault and is in part coeval with the youngest (ca. 585 Ma) subaerial volcanism west of this structure. Several contrasting ages, settings and styles of volcanic-hosted mineralization are preserved; these include volcanic-redbed copper, VMS-style zinc–lead–copper, and high- and low-sulphidation styles of precious metals. The new data also document a plutonic history that is complex, protracted and metallogenically important, especially vis-a-vis porphyry-style copper–gold mineralization. Several chronologically disparate, lithologically distinctive plutons have been mapped within the Holyrood Intrusive Suite. Additional subdivision and reassignment of rocks historically grouped with-in this suite likely will be required, as further geochemical and geochronological information becomes available.