Sedimentology and metamorphism of a proterozoic volcaniclastic turbidite suite that crosses the boundary between the Flin Flon and Kisseynew belts, File Lake, Manitoba, Canada

The Kisseynew sedimentary gneiss belt is near the southeast corner of the Churchill Province in Manitoba. It is a large, east-trending Proterozoic sedimentary basin composed largely of greywacke-, siltstone-, and mudstone-derived paragneisses and migmatites. It is bounded on the south by the Flin Fl...

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Main Author: Bailes, A. H.
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1979
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6278
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spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/6278 2023-06-18T03:40:12+02:00 Sedimentology and metamorphism of a proterozoic volcaniclastic turbidite suite that crosses the boundary between the Flin Flon and Kisseynew belts, File Lake, Manitoba, Canada Bailes, A. H. 1979 xi, 154 leaves : application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6278 eng eng ocm72733222 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6278 open access doctoral thesis 1979 ftunivmanitoba 2023-06-04T17:42:41Z The Kisseynew sedimentary gneiss belt is near the southeast corner of the Churchill Province in Manitoba. It is a large, east-trending Proterozoic sedimentary basin composed largely of greywacke-, siltstone-, and mudstone-derived paragneisses and migmatites. It is bounded on the south by the Flin Flon volcanic-sedimentary belt. In the File Lake area, well preserved, weakly recrystallized pebbly greywacke, greywacke, siltstone and mudstone of the Aphebian Amisk Group of the Flin Flon volcanic-sedimentary belt have been traced northwards across a steep metamorphic gradient directly into migmatitic Kisseynew belt paragneisses. The Amisk Group sedimentary rocks are mainly turbidites, with minor debris and fluidized sediment flow deposits. They are 1 km thick; consist almost entirely of volcanic detritus, which is mainly felsic in composition; and overlie a thick accumlation of Amisk Group mafic subaqueous flows. The felsic volcanic detritus is texturally and compositionally variable. This indicates a level of mixing which requires subaerial transport. The detritus was probably derived from easily eroded pyroclastic deposits of contemporaneous Amisk volcanoes, rather than by dissection of an older volcanic terrain by stream activity. This is indicated by: (i) only slight rounding of clasts; (ii) local intercalation of volcanic and sedimentary rocks; (iii) direct input of some strata into the sedimentary basin from their volcanic source without reworking; and (iv) absence of plutonic or metamorphic clasts. The metamorphic gradient of 21oC/km is too steep to be accounted for by selective uplift of more deeply buried and metamorphosed strata in the Kisseynew belt. There was probably a higher geothermal gradient in the Kisseynew belt than in the Flin Flon belt. This could have been caused by lower thermal conductivity of the volcanic rocks and consequent impedance of upward movement of heat in the Flin Flon belt relative to the Kisseynew belt. This mechanism could explain why Precambrian volcanic belts are invariably ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Churchill MSpace at the University of Manitoba Canada
institution Open Polar
collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
language English
description The Kisseynew sedimentary gneiss belt is near the southeast corner of the Churchill Province in Manitoba. It is a large, east-trending Proterozoic sedimentary basin composed largely of greywacke-, siltstone-, and mudstone-derived paragneisses and migmatites. It is bounded on the south by the Flin Flon volcanic-sedimentary belt. In the File Lake area, well preserved, weakly recrystallized pebbly greywacke, greywacke, siltstone and mudstone of the Aphebian Amisk Group of the Flin Flon volcanic-sedimentary belt have been traced northwards across a steep metamorphic gradient directly into migmatitic Kisseynew belt paragneisses. The Amisk Group sedimentary rocks are mainly turbidites, with minor debris and fluidized sediment flow deposits. They are 1 km thick; consist almost entirely of volcanic detritus, which is mainly felsic in composition; and overlie a thick accumlation of Amisk Group mafic subaqueous flows. The felsic volcanic detritus is texturally and compositionally variable. This indicates a level of mixing which requires subaerial transport. The detritus was probably derived from easily eroded pyroclastic deposits of contemporaneous Amisk volcanoes, rather than by dissection of an older volcanic terrain by stream activity. This is indicated by: (i) only slight rounding of clasts; (ii) local intercalation of volcanic and sedimentary rocks; (iii) direct input of some strata into the sedimentary basin from their volcanic source without reworking; and (iv) absence of plutonic or metamorphic clasts. The metamorphic gradient of 21oC/km is too steep to be accounted for by selective uplift of more deeply buried and metamorphosed strata in the Kisseynew belt. There was probably a higher geothermal gradient in the Kisseynew belt than in the Flin Flon belt. This could have been caused by lower thermal conductivity of the volcanic rocks and consequent impedance of upward movement of heat in the Flin Flon belt relative to the Kisseynew belt. This mechanism could explain why Precambrian volcanic belts are invariably ...
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Bailes, A. H.
spellingShingle Bailes, A. H.
Sedimentology and metamorphism of a proterozoic volcaniclastic turbidite suite that crosses the boundary between the Flin Flon and Kisseynew belts, File Lake, Manitoba, Canada
author_facet Bailes, A. H.
author_sort Bailes, A. H.
title Sedimentology and metamorphism of a proterozoic volcaniclastic turbidite suite that crosses the boundary between the Flin Flon and Kisseynew belts, File Lake, Manitoba, Canada
title_short Sedimentology and metamorphism of a proterozoic volcaniclastic turbidite suite that crosses the boundary between the Flin Flon and Kisseynew belts, File Lake, Manitoba, Canada
title_full Sedimentology and metamorphism of a proterozoic volcaniclastic turbidite suite that crosses the boundary between the Flin Flon and Kisseynew belts, File Lake, Manitoba, Canada
title_fullStr Sedimentology and metamorphism of a proterozoic volcaniclastic turbidite suite that crosses the boundary between the Flin Flon and Kisseynew belts, File Lake, Manitoba, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Sedimentology and metamorphism of a proterozoic volcaniclastic turbidite suite that crosses the boundary between the Flin Flon and Kisseynew belts, File Lake, Manitoba, Canada
title_sort sedimentology and metamorphism of a proterozoic volcaniclastic turbidite suite that crosses the boundary between the flin flon and kisseynew belts, file lake, manitoba, canada
publishDate 1979
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6278
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Churchill
genre_facet Churchill
op_relation ocm72733222
http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6278
op_rights open access
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