LATE-TACONIAN AND PRE-ACADIAN HISTORY OF THE NEW-ENGLAND APPALACHIANSOF SOUTHWESTERN CONNECTICUT

Citation
Jh. Sevigny et Gn. Hanson, LATE-TACONIAN AND PRE-ACADIAN HISTORY OF THE NEW-ENGLAND APPALACHIANSOF SOUTHWESTERN CONNECTICUT, Geological Society of America bulletin, 107(4), 1995, pp. 487-498
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Geology
ISSN journal
00167606
Volume
107
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
487 - 498
Database
ISI
SICI code
0016-7606(1995)107:4<487:LAPHOT>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
New U-Pb age determinations and field observations combined with publi shed field relations refine the late Taconian and pre-Acadian history of the New England Appalachians of southwestern Connecticut. Foliation within the Camerons Line shear zone was developed after 514 +/- 11 Ma but prior to 445 +/- 1.5 Ma, This structure probably experienced rene wed movement in the Early Silurian (437 +/- 2 Ma), as suggested by new xenotime growth in protomylonite. Metasedimentary and metavolcanic ro cks east of Camerons Line were deposited, were isoclinally folded, aci d reached temperatures in excess of about 550 degrees C before emplace ment of small dioritic plutons of the 453 +/- 3 Ma Brookfield plutonic series. Igneous titanites in Brookfield plutons cooled below U and Pb diffusion (e.g., 525 +/- 25 degrees C) in the latest Ordovician to ea rliest Silurian and were not reset in the Acadian. The Newtown gneiss is a composite magmatic complex composed of quartz diorite (446 +/- 2 Ma), granodiorite (436 +/- 2 Ma), and granite (458 +/- 2 Ma), Low Pb-2 07/Pb-204 feldspar isotopic compositions and 1150 Ma zircon inheritanc e in the Newtown gneiss and Brookfield plutonic series are consistent with interaction with Grenvillian crust or crustally derived material. We propose that the Newtown and Harrison gneisses, and possibly the B rookfield plutonic series, make up the plutonic roots of a Late Ordovi cian to Early Silurian (454-438 Ma) magmatic are complex generated dur ing subduction along the eastern North American continental margin. Ma gmatic activity was coeval with that in the Bronson Hill anticlinorium to the east (ca. 454-442 Ma),