We present results of integrated 40Ar/39Ar geochronology and microstructural analyses of samples from Taconic thrust faults of the northern New England Appalachians that provide evidence for reactivation during the Acadian, Neo-Acadian, and Alleghenian orogenies. 40Ar/39Ar ages c. 420 Ma from western frontal thrusts of the Green Mountains and Berkshire Massif have been interpreted previously to reflect partial resetting of Taconic ages during Acadian metamorphism. In Massachusetts and southern Vermont, these W-directed thrusts transport Grenville basement and its cover sequences over Cambrian-to-Ordovician phyllites and graphitic schists. Our recent investigations of these faults, however, yield a suite of c. 420 Ma 40Ar/39Ar ages obtained from syn-tectonic mica in mylonites and footwall schist/phyllite that are interpreted, rather, to reflect a pulse of W-directed thrusting. This interpretation that these ages record the timing of deformation is based, in part, on the preservation of quartz and feldspar dislocation creep microstructures (i.e., lack of evidence for static recrystallization), as well as the regional distribution of these data relative to Acadian metamorphic isograds. These results align with recent findings for the timing of formation of the Green Mountain Anticlinorium in northern Vermont, as well as detrital zircon data that require isolation of the Catskill Basin from the Connecticut Valley-Gaspe Basin (CVGB) at the onset of deposition around that time. Mylonites and samples from the adjacent footwall schists and phyllites also locally record evidence for minor to wholesale resetting c. 355 Ma associated with a younger phase of ductile deformation. Further evidence for partial resetting of 40Ar/39Ar ages c. 250 is associated with hematite-rich seams parallel to the mylonitic foliation and cross-cutting fractures. We explore how these age populations relate to those obtained from, for example, the CVGB and Chester and Athens Domes, and their implications for correlating surface geology with results from seismic imaging of the lithospheric and mantle structure in the northern New England Appalachians.
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Interpreting and reporting 40Ar/39Ar geochronologic data
Abstract The 40Ar/39Ar dating method is among the most versatile of geochronometers, having the potential to date a broad variety of K-bearing materials spanning from the time of Earth’s formation into the historical realm. Measurements using modern noble-gas mass spectrometers are now producing 40Ar/39Ar dates with analytical uncertainties of ∼0.1%, thereby providing precise time constraints for a wide range of geologic and extraterrestrial processes. Analyses of increasingly smaller subsamples have revealed age dispersion in many materials, including some minerals used as neutron fluence monitors. Accordingly, interpretive strategies are evolving to address observed dispersion in dates from a single sample. Moreover, inferring a geologically meaningful “age” from a measured “date” or set of dates is dependent on the geological problem being addressed and the salient assumptions associated with each set of data. We highlight requirements for collateral information that will better constrain the interpretation of 40Ar/39Ar data sets, including those associated with single-crystal fusion analyses, incremental heating experiments, and in situ analyses of microsampled domains. To ensure the utility and viability of published results, we emphasize previous recommendations for reporting 40Ar/39Ar data and the related essential metadata, with the amendment that data conform to evolving standards of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) by both humans and computers. Our examples provide guidance for the presentation and interpretation of 40Ar/39Ar dates to maximize their interdisciplinary usage, reproducibility, and longevity.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1740694
- PAR ID:
- 10292918
- Author(s) / Creator(s):
- ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; more »
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- GSA Bulletin
- Volume:
- 133
- Issue:
- 3-4
- ISSN:
- 0016-7606
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 461 to 487
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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The southern Appalachians preserve evidence for three Paleozoic orogenies that contributed to construction of the composite southern Appalachian orogen, including the Taconic (480-440 Ma), Neoacadian (380-340 Ma), and Alleghanian (330-280 Ma) events. However, the complexity of thermal-metamorphic overprinting and polydeformation has impeded efforts to examine questions related to tectonic processes such as the crustal escape flow hypothesis in the southern Appalachians. To address this, new monazite and xenotime laser ablation split-stream U-Pb and hornblende 40Ar/39Ar dates have been produced for the Blue Ridge (BR) and Inner Piedmont (IP), and these data are being compiled with all previously available geo-thermochronological and quantitative P-T data to construct P-T-t histories for different parts of the orogen. Monazite U-Pb dates from prograde monazites in the North Carolina BR yield a clear Taconic (464-441 Ma) metamorphic signal for conditions up to granulite facies, which is interpreted to result from development of a Taconic accretion-subduction complex. Following the Taconic arcs collision, this part of the BR was cooled during Neoacadian and Alleghanian uplift and exhumation pulses, as indicated by thermochronologic dates spanning a wide range of closure temperatures (~550-220 °C). In the IP and Sauratown Mountains window, U-Pb dates of mostly prograde monazite growth yield a dominant Neoacadian signal (369-358 Ma), which corroborates previous age estimates for IP Barrovian metamorphism up to sillimanite II grade. In the IP, hornblende 40Ar/39Ar ages of 380-345 Ma generally indicate syn-Neoacadian cooling below ~500 °C. In the IP between the Brevard and Brindle Creek fault zones, Y-rich monazites yield younger dates (~330 Ma) that overlap with hornblende 40Ar/39Ar yield ages (335-324 Ma). Combined, these ages are interpreted to reflect post-Neoacadian reactivation and retrogression of the Brevard fault zone and potential folding(?) of the Brindle Creek fault zones during early Alleghanian deformation. This retrograde deformation persists until at least 297 Ma, as reflected by xenotime dates in the Brevard zone (311-297 Ma). Future work will address how the timing and extent of metamorphism, deformation, and exhumation may vary south of the present study area.more » « less
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