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Abstract The Willsboro–Lewis wollastonite district occurs along the margin of the 1.15-Ga Marcy anorthosite massif in the Adirondack Highlands (New York) and records mineralogical and isotopic evidence for formation in the anorthosite’s low-pressure metamorphic contact aureole. Wollastonite–garnet–pyroxene gneisses in the ~25-km-long, 1.5-km-thick skarn belt are mined for wollastonite and are intercalated with massive garnetite and pyroxene ± garnet skarns, all of which have low oxygen isotope ratios indicating circulation of heated meteoric water and relatively shallow depths above the brittle–ductile transition during their formation. Anorthosite, skarns, and country rocks were all variably deformed and recrystallized at depths of 25 to 30 km during the 1.09- to 1.02-Ga Ottawan phase, and locally altered during the 1.01- to 0.98-Ga Rigolet phase, of the Grenvillian orogeny. This study examined rare zircon in low-δ18O skarn rocks to constrain the timing of surface-derived meteoric water infiltration. Zircon was dated, and trace elements were measured by laser-ablation ICPMS, and oxygen isotopes were measured by ion microprobe, yielding a spectrum of ages and oxygen isotope ratios reflecting the polymetamorphic history of these rocks. Most samples are dominated by metamorphic zircon having Ottawan or Rigolet 207Pb/206Pb ages and are in high-temperature oxygen isotopic equilibrium with host wollastonite, garnet and/or pyroxene. Several samples contain igneous zircon with disturbed U–Pb isotope systematics, reflecting some combination of new zircon growth and recrystallization during subsequent metamorphism. Relict 1150–1140 Ma ages are preserved in some zircon cores, which are taken as the ages of igneous zircon incorporated during skarn formation or from protoliths. Some of these 1150 to 1140 Ma cores preserve the low-δ18O record of interaction with meteoric water. Ages seen in the Willsboro–Lewis skarns reproduce the span of igneous, disturbed and metamorphic ages in Adirondack anorthosite, and point to contemporaneous anorthosite emplacement, meteoric water circulation and skarn formation at ca. 1150 Ma. This result is consistent with shallow emplacement of the Marcy anorthosite massif during crustal thinning related to the collapse of the 1.19- to 1.14-Ga Shawinigan orogeny, and that granulite facies overprinting was a later tectonic event.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
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Strachan, R (Ed.)Abstract The northern North American Cordilleran margin has been active for >200 million years, as recorded by punctuated phases of crustal growth and deformation. Accretion of the exotic Wrangellia Composite Terrane (Insular Belt) is considered the largest addition of juvenile crust to the Cordilleran margin, though margin-parallel translation during the Cenozoic has obscured much of the accretionary history. Three zones of inverted metamorphism spatially correspond to the Insular–North American suture zone from north to south: (1) Clearwater Mountains; (2) Kluane Lake; and (3) Coast Mountains, each preserving kinematics indicative of thrusting of North American–derived rocks over Insular-derived assemblages. We performed in situ monazite petrochronology on samples collected across strike in both the Clearwater and Coast Mountain regions. New and recently published data from these three metamorphic belts indicate that thrust-sense deformation accompanied the formation of inverted metamorphic isograds from 72 to 56 Ma. We leverage recent estimates of Denali fault offset to reconstruct a >1000-km-long zone of inverted metamorphism and interpret it as the Insular–North America terminal suture.more » « less
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Oblique convergence along strike-slip faults can lead to both distributed and localized deformation. How focused transpressive deformation is both localized and maintained along sub-vertical wrench structures to create high topography and deep exhumation warrants further investigation. The high peak region of the Hayes Range, central Alaska, USA, is bound by two lithospheric scale vertical faults: the Denali fault to the south and Hines Creek fault to the north. The high topography area has peaks over 4000 m and locally has experienced more than 14 km of Neogene exhumation, yet the mountain range is located on the convex side of the Denali fault Mount Hayes restraining bend, where slip partitioning alone cannot account for this zone of extreme exhumation. Through the application of U-Pb zircon, 40Ar/39Ar (hornblende, muscovite, biotite, and K-feldspar), apatite fission-track, and (U-Th)/He geo-thermochronology, we test whether these two parallel, reactivated suture zone structures are working in tandem to vertically extrude the Between the Hines Creek and Denali faults block on the convex side of the Mount Hayes restraining bend. We document that since at least 45 Ma, the Denali fault has been bent and localized in a narrow fault zone (<160 m) with a significant dip-slip component, the Mount Hayes restraining bend has been fixed to the north side of the Denali fault, and that the Between the Hines Creek and Denali faults block has been undergoing vertical extrusion as a relatively coherent block along the displacement “free faces” of two lithospheric scale suture zone faults. A bent Denali fault by ca. 45 Ma supports the long-standing Alaska orocline hypothesis that has Alaska bent by ca. 44 Ma. Southern Alaska is currently converging at ~4 mm/yr to the north against the Denali fault and driving vertical extrusion of the Between the Hines Creek and Denali faults block and deformation north of the Hines Creek fault. We apply insights ascertained from the Between the Hines Creek and Denali faults block to another region in southern Alaska, the Fairweather Range, where extreme topography and persistent exhumation is also located between two sub-parallel faults, and propose that this region has likely undergone vertical extrusion along the free faces of those faults.more » « less
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null (Ed.)Deeply exhumed granulite terranes have long been considered nonrepresentative of lower continental crust largely because their bulk compositions do not match the lower crustal xenolith record. A paradigm shift in our understanding of deep crust has since occurred with new evidence for a more felsic and compositionally heterogeneous lower crust than previously recognized. The >20,000-km 2 Athabasca granulite terrane locally provides a >700-Myr-old window into this type of lower crust, prior to being exhumed and uplifted to the surface between 1.9 and 1.7 Ga. We review over 20 years of research on this terrane with an emphasis on what these findings may tell us about the origin and behavior of lower continental crust, in general, in addition to placing constraints on the tectonic evolution of the western Canadian Shield between 2.6 and 1.7 Ga. The results reveal a dynamic lower continental crust that evolved compositionally and rheologically with time.more » « less
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