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Magmatic, Metamorphic and Tectonic Processes in Ophiolite Genesis |
1 Institut National de la Recherche ScientifiqueEau, Terre et Environnement, 880 Chemin Sainte-Foy, Québec, PQ, Canada, G1S 2L2
2 Natural Resources Canada, Geological Survey, 880 Chemin Sainte-Foy, Québec, PQ, Canada, G1S 2L2 jbedard{at}nrcan.gc.ca
3 Département des Sciences de la Tere, Université du Québec à Montréal, CP 8888, Succursal centre ville, Montréal, PQ, Canada, H3C 3P8
The Ordovician Thetford Mines Ophiolite Complex (TMOC) is an oceanic terrane accreted to the Laurentian margin during the Taconic Orogeny and is affected by syn-obduction (syn-emplacement) deformation and two post-obduction events (Silurian backthrusting and normal faulting, and Acadian folding and reverse faulting). The southern part of the TMOC was tilted to the vertical during post-obduction deformation and preserves a nearly complete cross-section through the crust. From base to top we distinguish cumulate Dunitic, Pyroxenitic and Gabbroic Zones, a hypabyssal unit (either sheeted dykes or a subvolcanic breccia facies), and an ophiolitic extrusive-sedimentary sequence, upon which were deposited sedimentary rocks constituting the base of a piggy-back basin. Our mapping has revealed the presence of subvertically dipping, north-south- to 20°-striking faults, spaced c. 1 km apart on average. The faults are manifested as sheared or mylonitic dunites and synmagmatic breccias, and correspond to breaks in lithology. The fault breccias are cut by undeformed websteritic to peridotitic intrusions, demonstrating the pre- to synmagmatic nature of the faulting. Assuming that rhythmic cumulate bedding was originally palaeo-horizontal, kinematic analysis indicates that these are normal faults separating a series of tilted blocks. In the upper part of the crust, the north-south-striking fault blocks contain north-south-striking dykes that locally constitute a sheeted complex. The faults correspond to marked lateral changes in the thickness and facies assemblages seen in supracrustal rocks, are locally marked by prominent subvolcanic breccias, and have upward decreasing throws suggesting that they are growth faults. The base of the volcano-sedimentary sequence is a major erosional surface in places, which can penetrate down to the Dunitic Zone. The evidence for coeval extension and magmatism, and the discovery of a locally well-developed sheeted dyke complex, suggest that the TMOC formed by sea-floor spreading. The dominance of a boninitic signature in cumulate and volcanic rocks suggests that spreading occurred in a subduction zone environment, possibly in a forearc setting.