<p> The Peter Strides Pond study area, approximately 150 km^2, is located in the Southern Long Range Mountains in southwestern Newfoundland. It lies at the southern margin of the Paleozoic Central Mobile Belt in the Dunnage tectonostratigraphic zone. A felsic intrusion, granoblastic gneiss, heterolithic conglomerate and basalt form foliated, linear bodies across the study area parallel to the regional, northeast striking, structural grain; gabbro, diabase and rhyolite have non-linear exposure and no internal fabric. Two parallel mylonite zones traverse the study area. The Victoria River Shear Zone (VRSZ) to the north and the Peter Strides Pond Shear Zone (PSPSZ) to the south are concordant with the regional fabric and separate domains which increase in metamorphic grade from lower greenschist in the northwest to upper amphibolite facies to the southeast. Veins and lenses of variable form and composition are observed in several lithologies but the focussed occurrence of milky white, foliation parallel quartz veins in both the VRSZ and the felsic pluton is significant to these
units.</p> <p> A tentative stratigraphic succession for the study area utilizes regional correlations, radiometric ages and fossil evidence because limited exposure does not reveal contacts between adjacent lithologies. Basalt of the Victoria Lake Group and gneiss of the Bay du Nord Group are the oldest units in the area. Conglomerate unconformably overlies the Victoria Lake Group and contains volcanic and sedimentary clasts derived from the underlying group. Mafic to felsic plutonic igneous rocks intrude volcanic rocks of the Victoria Lake Group. Undated gabbro, diorite and diabase may be coeval with Devonian adamellite-granodiorite.
Parallel shear zones are concordant with the regional structural grain and follow lithologic contacts closely. Megacrystic granite cross-cuts PSP mylonite, adamellite and Bay du Nord gneiss. It is the youngest unit in the study area. The study area's tectonic framework represents a compressional environment which dominated during, and continued after Iapetus closure. Mafic volcanic rocks adjacent to ophiolite complexes represent back arc basins preserved via obduction. Continued compression was accomodated by crustal thickening through reverse, northwest directed, thrust faults. The inhomogeneously thickened crust provided a host of potential magma compositions to be intruded locally.</p> / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/19848 |
Date | 06 1900 |
Creators | Ferguson, John D. |
Contributors | Clifford, Paul M., Geology |
Source Sets | McMaster University |
Language | en_US |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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