The Geology And Blueschist Petrology Of The Western Ambler Schist Belt, Southwestern Brooks Range, Alaska

The western Ambler Schist Belt is located in the southern Brooks Range of Alaska and is defined in this study as that part of the Brooks Range schist belt which contains abundant bimodal volcanic, volcaniclastic and related carbonate sediments. The schist belt appears to be the basinal part of Middl...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nelsen, Craig Joseph
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: UNM Digital Repository 1979
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/eps_etds/394
https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/context/eps_etds/article/1414/viewcontent/NELSEN_GEOLOGY_BLUESCHIST_ALASKA_opt.pdf
id ftunvnewmexicoir:oai:digitalrepository.unm.edu:eps_etds-1414
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunvnewmexicoir:oai:digitalrepository.unm.edu:eps_etds-1414 2024-06-02T08:04:37+00:00 The Geology And Blueschist Petrology Of The Western Ambler Schist Belt, Southwestern Brooks Range, Alaska Nelsen, Craig Joseph 1979-05-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/eps_etds/394 https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/context/eps_etds/article/1414/viewcontent/NELSEN_GEOLOGY_BLUESCHIST_ALASKA_opt.pdf English eng UNM Digital Repository https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/eps_etds/394 https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/context/eps_etds/article/1414/viewcontent/NELSEN_GEOLOGY_BLUESCHIST_ALASKA_opt.pdf Earth and Planetary Sciences ETDs Geology text 1979 ftunvnewmexicoir 2024-05-06T00:14:26Z The western Ambler Schist Belt is located in the southern Brooks Range of Alaska and is defined in this study as that part of the Brooks Range schist belt which contains abundant bimodal volcanic, volcaniclastic and related carbonate sediments. The schist belt appears to be the basinal part of Middle Devonian through Mississippian shelf-slope-basin sequence. To the south of the schist belt are upper Paleozoic-Mesozoic (?) ophiolite overlain by Cretaceous greywackes and calc-alkalic intrusives and related extrusives. These two distinct terrains are juxtaposed along a suspected continental suture, the Angayucham-Cosmos Hills-Jade Mountain belt, on with a minimum of 115 km of crustal shortening by obduction has been postulated (Roeder and Mull, 1978). Lithologies in the western Ambler Schist Belt appear to be related to the development of submarine felsic volcanic centers. Laterally equivalent to Felsic Domes are Proximal Deposits consisting of metabasalts and (or) felsic metavolcanics. Farther removed are Distal Deposits which appear to have resulted from clastic contamination of metavolcanics. The most prominent structure in the schist belt is the Kalurivik Arch, the surface expression of an asymmetric, northward yielding nappe. The study area is located along the south limb of this structure and is dominated by at least three large northward vergent thrusts and related folds. Three episodes of folding are recognized, an initial isoclinal episode followed by a thrust-related episode which culminated around 98 m.y. Post-metamorphic, open, gentle folds may be related to strike-slip motion on the Kobuk and related faults. Greenstones in the western Ambler Schist Belt were initially metamorphosed to the blueschist facies and have been prograded to the greenschist facies. An amphibole geobarometer developed by Brown (1976) was employed to estimate the physical condition of these two events. The blueschist event took place at 6.5-7.0 kb and 300-350â—¦ C while the environment of the greenschist event was 1.5-3.5 kb and ... Text Brooks Range Alaska UNM Digital Repository (The University of New Mexico) Mull ENVELOPE(-63.058,-63.058,-74.536,-74.536)
institution Open Polar
collection UNM Digital Repository (The University of New Mexico)
op_collection_id ftunvnewmexicoir
language English
topic Geology
spellingShingle Geology
Nelsen, Craig Joseph
The Geology And Blueschist Petrology Of The Western Ambler Schist Belt, Southwestern Brooks Range, Alaska
topic_facet Geology
description The western Ambler Schist Belt is located in the southern Brooks Range of Alaska and is defined in this study as that part of the Brooks Range schist belt which contains abundant bimodal volcanic, volcaniclastic and related carbonate sediments. The schist belt appears to be the basinal part of Middle Devonian through Mississippian shelf-slope-basin sequence. To the south of the schist belt are upper Paleozoic-Mesozoic (?) ophiolite overlain by Cretaceous greywackes and calc-alkalic intrusives and related extrusives. These two distinct terrains are juxtaposed along a suspected continental suture, the Angayucham-Cosmos Hills-Jade Mountain belt, on with a minimum of 115 km of crustal shortening by obduction has been postulated (Roeder and Mull, 1978). Lithologies in the western Ambler Schist Belt appear to be related to the development of submarine felsic volcanic centers. Laterally equivalent to Felsic Domes are Proximal Deposits consisting of metabasalts and (or) felsic metavolcanics. Farther removed are Distal Deposits which appear to have resulted from clastic contamination of metavolcanics. The most prominent structure in the schist belt is the Kalurivik Arch, the surface expression of an asymmetric, northward yielding nappe. The study area is located along the south limb of this structure and is dominated by at least three large northward vergent thrusts and related folds. Three episodes of folding are recognized, an initial isoclinal episode followed by a thrust-related episode which culminated around 98 m.y. Post-metamorphic, open, gentle folds may be related to strike-slip motion on the Kobuk and related faults. Greenstones in the western Ambler Schist Belt were initially metamorphosed to the blueschist facies and have been prograded to the greenschist facies. An amphibole geobarometer developed by Brown (1976) was employed to estimate the physical condition of these two events. The blueschist event took place at 6.5-7.0 kb and 300-350â—¦ C while the environment of the greenschist event was 1.5-3.5 kb and ...
format Text
author Nelsen, Craig Joseph
author_facet Nelsen, Craig Joseph
author_sort Nelsen, Craig Joseph
title The Geology And Blueschist Petrology Of The Western Ambler Schist Belt, Southwestern Brooks Range, Alaska
title_short The Geology And Blueschist Petrology Of The Western Ambler Schist Belt, Southwestern Brooks Range, Alaska
title_full The Geology And Blueschist Petrology Of The Western Ambler Schist Belt, Southwestern Brooks Range, Alaska
title_fullStr The Geology And Blueschist Petrology Of The Western Ambler Schist Belt, Southwestern Brooks Range, Alaska
title_full_unstemmed The Geology And Blueschist Petrology Of The Western Ambler Schist Belt, Southwestern Brooks Range, Alaska
title_sort geology and blueschist petrology of the western ambler schist belt, southwestern brooks range, alaska
publisher UNM Digital Repository
publishDate 1979
url https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/eps_etds/394
https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/context/eps_etds/article/1414/viewcontent/NELSEN_GEOLOGY_BLUESCHIST_ALASKA_opt.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-63.058,-63.058,-74.536,-74.536)
geographic Mull
geographic_facet Mull
genre Brooks Range
Alaska
genre_facet Brooks Range
Alaska
op_source Earth and Planetary Sciences ETDs
op_relation https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/eps_etds/394
https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/context/eps_etds/article/1414/viewcontent/NELSEN_GEOLOGY_BLUESCHIST_ALASKA_opt.pdf
_version_ 1800749258460102656