1. Long-lived transpression in the Archean Bird River greenstone belt, western Superior Province, Southeastern Manitoba
- Author
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Duguet, Manuel, Lin, Shoufa, Davis, Don W., Corkery, M. Timothy, and McDonald, Justin
- Subjects
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ARCHAEAN stratigraphic geology , *GREENSTONE belts , *STRUCTURAL geology , *GEODYNAMICS , *GEOLOGICAL time scales ,WINNIPEG Region (Man.) - Abstract
Abstract: The Archean Bird River greenstone belt (BRGB) is located on the southwestern edge of the Superior Province between the 3.2Ga old Winnipeg River subprovince to the south and the metasedimentary belt of the English River subprovince (ERSP) to the north. This position between two major subprovinces makes the BRGB a primary target for investigating the geodynamic and kinematic evolution of a major structural boundary. New structural and geochronological data have allowed us to present an evolutionary framework for the southern boundary of the North Caribou superterrane. The BRGB underwent 3 main deformation phases. The D1 event took place ca. 2698Ma and displays a north-side-up shearing. The D2 event, occurring at ca. 2684Ma in a transpressive context, presents a complex structural pattern mixing vertical tectonics in the BRGB and strike-slip tectonics along the boundaries of the greenstone belt with other subprovinces. Between the BRGB and the ERSP, the 2832–2858Ma old Maskwa batholith acted as a rigid passive block during the collision and marks the boundary between pure dextral strike-slip tectonics along his northern boundary with the ERSP and vertical south-side-up motion in the BRGB. The BRGB can be considered as a pop-up structure with anastomosed shear zones displaying different horizontal offset according to the orientation of the shear zones. The southern boundary with the Winnipeg River subprovince is represented by a sinistral south-side-up shear zone. The same pattern is found at the regional scale where major shear zones acted as a conjugate set in the horizontal plane. At ca. 2640Ma, the D3 event occurred in a general dextral transpressive tectonic regime coeval with the emplacement of rare-elements pegmatitic plutons in a still hot (400–500°C) country rock. The geodynamical and mechanical significance of the partitioning between pure strike-slip tectonics in the English River subprovince and vertical motion in the BRGB can be explained by the rheological behaviour of a hot and weak lithosphere undergoing transpressive strain. The structural framework of the BRGB is the result of strong interactions between hot and weak domains, coeval with widespread plutonism, and a rigid older domain (Maskwa batholith) during the D2 transpressive event. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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