학술논문

Deformation history and tectonic significance of the Sanagak Lake shear zone, Boothia Peninsula, Nunavut
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences = Revue Canadienne des Sciences de la Terre. 59(12):1031-1052
Subject
16|Structural geology
amphibole group
Ar/Ar
Boothia Peninsula
Canada
Canadian Shield
chain silicates
Churchill Province
clinoamphibole
deformation
faults
framework silicates
granites
granodiorites
hornblende
Hudsonian Orogeny
igneous rocks
metamorphism
mylonitization
nesosilicates
North America
Nunavut
orogenic belts
orthosilicates
plate collision
plate tectonics
plutonic rocks
Precambrian
quartz
Rae Province
Sanagak Lake shear zone
shear zones
silica minerals
silicates
strain
stress
strike-slip faults
tectonics
titanite
titanite group
U/Pb
Language
English
ISSN
0008-4077
Abstract
The recently recognized Sanagak Lake shear zone (SLsz) is a 165 km long, southwest striking corridor of high-strain rocks that transects the southern portion of Boothia Peninsula, Nunavut. This zone records pervasive deformation (DSL1) at conditions of ∼0.52 GPa and ∼700°C, and localized deformation (DSL2) at ≥0.5 GPa and 300-500°C that preserve left lateral and right lateral senses of movement, respectively. Neocrystallized DSL1 titanite in a hornblende-bearing granodiorite yields an age of 1804±6 Ma, interpreted to be the timing of DSL1. The timing of DSL2 is loosely bracketed by 40Ar/39Ar hornblende (1814±3 Ma) and biotite (1742±1 Ma) cooling ages since the deformation temperature falls between the estimated closure temperature of these minerals. Similar rock types and metamorphic conditions on either side of the shear zone rule out the SLsz as a terrane boundary. Rather, strain localization may have been triggered by thermal softening related to the emplacement of a northeast-trending belt of high-temperature granites south of the shear zone between 1840 and 1820 Ma. Deformation and metamorphism at ca. 1.81 Ga south of Boothia Peninsula and in the central Rae (Committee Bay belt) have been attributed to the Superior Province colliding with the southeastern margin of the Rae craton, such that the SLsz may too have formed in response to far-field stresses derived from this collision. The absence of ca. 1.81 Ga tectonic fabrics north of the shear zone indicates that the SLsz marks the northwestern extent of mid-crustal, Trans-Hudson related tectonometamorphism.