An Outline of the Geology of Labrador

Labrador forms the eastern portion of the Precambrian Canadian Shield. It is divisible into four geologic provinces, each characterized by different orogenic history. Superior Province, in Western Labrador, and Nain Province, along the eastern and northern coast, represent parts of Archean orogenic...

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Main Author: Greene, B. A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Geological Association of Canada 1974
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/GC/article/view/2844
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spelling ftuninewbrunojs:oai:ojs.journals.lib.unb.ca:article/2844 2023-05-15T17:13:58+02:00 An Outline of the Geology of Labrador Greene, B. A. 1974-08-08 application/pdf https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/GC/article/view/2844 eng eng Geological Association of Canada https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/GC/article/view/2844/3361 https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/GC/article/view/2844 Copyright (c) 2015 Geoscience Canada Geoscience Canada; Volume 1, Number 3 (1974) 1911-4850 0315-0941 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion research-article 1974 ftuninewbrunojs 2022-07-11T11:46:59Z Labrador forms the eastern portion of the Precambrian Canadian Shield. It is divisible into four geologic provinces, each characterized by different orogenic history. Superior Province, in Western Labrador, and Nain Province, along the eastern and northern coast, represent parts of Archean orogenic belts. Both consist primarily of high grade metamorphic rocks, which in Nain Province are overlain locally by less deformed Proterozoic sedimentary and volcanic assemblages. Churchill Province trends northward across central Labrador, between the two older orogens. It is composed of a western belt of relatively little deformed sedimentary and volcanic rocks, and an eastern zone of high grade metamorphic rocks, both of which were last deformed in the Early Proterozoic Hudsonian orogeny. Grenville Province trends east-northeast across southern Labrador. It is composed largely of quartzo-feldspathic gneisses, last deformed in the Grenvillian orogeny of the Middle Proterozoic. The metamorphic rocks of Grenville, Nain and Churchill Provinces are intruded by large anorthosite-adamellite plutons, emplaced during the Middle Proterozoic. Exploration in Labrador has been concentrated in two areas: the Labrador Trough, in the western part of Churchill Province, and the "Central Mineral Belt" of Labrador, which extends eastward across the southern parts of Churchill and Nain Provinces. Mining in the Labrador portion of the Trough accounts for about half of Canada's iron ore production. Uranium, copper, beryllium and molybdenum occurrences are being investigated in the central mineral belt. Article in Journal/Newspaper Nain University of New Brunswick: Centre for Digital Scholarship Journals Nain ENVELOPE(-61.695,-61.695,56.542,56.542)
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description Labrador forms the eastern portion of the Precambrian Canadian Shield. It is divisible into four geologic provinces, each characterized by different orogenic history. Superior Province, in Western Labrador, and Nain Province, along the eastern and northern coast, represent parts of Archean orogenic belts. Both consist primarily of high grade metamorphic rocks, which in Nain Province are overlain locally by less deformed Proterozoic sedimentary and volcanic assemblages. Churchill Province trends northward across central Labrador, between the two older orogens. It is composed of a western belt of relatively little deformed sedimentary and volcanic rocks, and an eastern zone of high grade metamorphic rocks, both of which were last deformed in the Early Proterozoic Hudsonian orogeny. Grenville Province trends east-northeast across southern Labrador. It is composed largely of quartzo-feldspathic gneisses, last deformed in the Grenvillian orogeny of the Middle Proterozoic. The metamorphic rocks of Grenville, Nain and Churchill Provinces are intruded by large anorthosite-adamellite plutons, emplaced during the Middle Proterozoic. Exploration in Labrador has been concentrated in two areas: the Labrador Trough, in the western part of Churchill Province, and the "Central Mineral Belt" of Labrador, which extends eastward across the southern parts of Churchill and Nain Provinces. Mining in the Labrador portion of the Trough accounts for about half of Canada's iron ore production. Uranium, copper, beryllium and molybdenum occurrences are being investigated in the central mineral belt.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Greene, B. A.
spellingShingle Greene, B. A.
An Outline of the Geology of Labrador
author_facet Greene, B. A.
author_sort Greene, B. A.
title An Outline of the Geology of Labrador
title_short An Outline of the Geology of Labrador
title_full An Outline of the Geology of Labrador
title_fullStr An Outline of the Geology of Labrador
title_full_unstemmed An Outline of the Geology of Labrador
title_sort outline of the geology of labrador
publisher Geological Association of Canada
publishDate 1974
url https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/GC/article/view/2844
long_lat ENVELOPE(-61.695,-61.695,56.542,56.542)
geographic Nain
geographic_facet Nain
genre Nain
genre_facet Nain
op_source Geoscience Canada; Volume 1, Number 3 (1974)
1911-4850
0315-0941
op_relation https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/GC/article/view/2844/3361
https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/GC/article/view/2844
op_rights Copyright (c) 2015 Geoscience Canada
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