The Betts Cove ophiolite and related rocks of the Snooks Arm group, Newfoundland

The Snooks Arm Group consists of a Lower Ordovician ophiolite suite at the base which is conformably overlain by two sedimentary/pyroclastic and two pillow lava formations. The ophiolite suite, best developed at Betts Cove, comprises a basal ultramafic member followed in order by a gabbroic, a sheet...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Upadhyay, Hansa Datt
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 1973
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/6721/
https://research.library.mun.ca/6721/1/HDUpadhyay_1.pdf
https://research.library.mun.ca/6721/3/HDUpadhyay_1.pdf
Description
Summary:The Snooks Arm Group consists of a Lower Ordovician ophiolite suite at the base which is conformably overlain by two sedimentary/pyroclastic and two pillow lava formations. The ophiolite suite, best developed at Betts Cove, comprises a basal ultramafic member followed in order by a gabbroic, a sheeted dyke, and a pillow lava member, all of which have transitional contacts with each other. The ultramafic member consists of interlayered peridotite, pyroxenite, serpentinized dunite, and minor rodingitized gabbro. The gabbroic member consists of layered quartz gabbro, minor clinopyroxenite and quantitatively negligible diorite. The sheeted dyke member possesses over 90 percent diabase and ultramafic dykes that are subvertical and parallel to one another. The pillow lava member contains basaltic (spilitic) and ultramafic pillows and sills. The sedimentary/pyroclastic formations consist of andesitic agglomerate and flysch, deep-sea sediments and diabase sills. The two pillow lava formations of the upper part of the Snooks Arm Group comprise tholeiitic basalt and diabase dykes/sills that were derived from a different magma group. -- The Betts Cove ophiolite is interpreted as part of a Lower Ordovician oceanic crust and mantle that was developed through sea-floor spreading and was subsequently thrust (obducted) on to the Fleur de Lys continental mass. Field and chemical data indicate that the ophiolite suite was produced through fractional crystallization of a single parent magma with a hiatus between the formation of the ultramafic-gabbro sequence and that of the sheeted dyke-pillow lava assemblage. The upper part of the Snooks Arm Group shows affinity to an island arc type environment and might represent crust of a basin marginal to a major Lower Paleozoic ("Proto-Atlantic") ocean. -- The Snooks Arm Group was subjected to low-grade burial metamorphism during Early Ordovician and to greenschist facies regional metamorphism during Devonian (Acadian) time. -- The ophiolite suite is similar in many respects to the modern ...