TECTONIC IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY SILURIAN THRUST IMBRICATION OF THE NORTHERN EXPLOITS SUBZONE, CENTRAL NEWFOUNDLAND

Abstract-Central Newfoundland’s Dunnage Zone contains a composite assemblage of island arc and oceanic rocks formed in the Paleozoic Iapetus Ocean. Two different and perhaps unrelated Late Cambrian-Middle Ordovician volcanic belts (Lush’s Bight and Robert’s Arm belts, and their correlatives) are pre...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: T. M. Kusky, W. S. F. Kidd
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.538.1225
http://www.atmos.albany.edu/facstaff/wkidd/Kusky%26Kidd96JGeodyn.pdf
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Summary:Abstract-Central Newfoundland’s Dunnage Zone contains a composite assemblage of island arc and oceanic rocks formed in the Paleozoic Iapetus Ocean. Two different and perhaps unrelated Late Cambrian-Middle Ordovician volcanic belts (Lush’s Bight and Robert’s Arm belts, and their correlatives) are preserved in the Notre Dame Subzone, and are interpreted to represent arc and back-arc basin sequences developed; (1) adjacent to the Laurentian margin of Iapetus and (2) in the intraoceanic realm of the 4000 km wide Paleozoic ocean. Paleozoic paleogeographic reconstructions suggest hat the Exploits Subzone contains volcanic and sedimentary rocks originally deposited in a third arc located between the intraoceanic arc (Robert’s Arm Belt) and the Peruvian promontory of Gondwana. The New Bay Pond area is located within the northern Exploits Subzone, and preserves an imbricate thrust stack formed during Late Ordovician/Early Silurian southeastward-directed hrusting. Thrust-load related subsidence led to deposition of cherts and argillites overlain by a southeastward-prograding wedge of erogenic flysch and molasse in a foreland trough. Late Ordovician-Early Silurian structural disruption of the flysch/molasse sequence and older strata of the northern Exploits Subzone, by a series of thrust faults, place Middle Ordovician rocks over the younger flysch, and