4.5 Article

Geology and Neoarchean tectonic setting of the Central Hearne supracrustal belt, Western Churchill Province, Nunavut, Canada

Journal

PRECAMBRIAN RESEARCH
Volume 134, Issue 1-2, Pages 63-83

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.precamres.2004.04.005

Keywords

Western Churchill; Neoarchean; Central Hearne; geology; tectonics

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The Central Hearne supracrustal belt, one of the largest Neoarchean greenstone terranes in the Canadian Shield, occurs in the Hearne domain of the Western Churchill Province, one of the largest, poorly known fragments of Archean crust on Earth. The belt contains two isotopically juvenile volcano-plutonic assemblages (1: similar to2710-2690 Ma, and 11: similar to2685-2680 Mal, separated in time by localised, similar to2690 Ma, greenschist-facies deformation (D 1), and overlain by similar to2680 Ma Archean siliciclastic and chemical sedimentary rocks. Extensive, penetrative, greenschist-facies regional deformation (D2) occurred at similar to2680 Ma, with amphibolite-facies metamorphism localised in the aureoles of isotopically juvenile synkinematic plutons. In many respects, the Central Hearne supracrustal belt is similar to other Neoarchean greenstone belts that have been interpreted in terms of arc-subduction systems. e.g. the Abitibi greenstone belt of the Superior Province. However, the principal tectonic characteristics of the Central Hearne supracrustal belt include: (i) location in an anomalously wide (>225 km) swath of penecontemporaneous juvenile crust that extends across much of the Hearne domain; (ii) close, primary intercalation of contemporaneous volcanic rocks of MORB-like and arc-like geochemical signatures, coupled with highly discontinuous volcanic map units; (iii) abundant intermediate to felsic volcanic rocks that do not represent a localised, laterally extensive volcanic arc edifice; and (iv) the development of isolated, independent, felsic volcanic centres throughout the magmatic history of the belt. These features are incompatible with oceanic arc or plateau models. We propose that the early history (assemblage 1) of the Central Hearne supracrustal belt may be analogous with a modified extensional, suprasubduction infant arc model, such as that described for the earliest (Eocene) phase of construction of the Izu-Marianas-Bonin and Tonga arc-trench systems of the Southwest Pacific Ocean. The later history (assemblage II) may reflect attempted initiation of classical subduction and arc construction. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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