THE GREAT TONALITE SILL - EMPLACEMENT INTO A CONTRACTIONAL SHEAR ZONEAND IMPLICATIONS FOR LATE CRETACEOUS TO EARLY EOCENE TECTONICS IN SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA AND BRITISH-COLUMBIA
Gm. Ingram et Dhw. Hutton, THE GREAT TONALITE SILL - EMPLACEMENT INTO A CONTRACTIONAL SHEAR ZONEAND IMPLICATIONS FOR LATE CRETACEOUS TO EARLY EOCENE TECTONICS IN SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA AND BRITISH-COLUMBIA, Geological Society of America bulletin, 106(5), 1994, pp. 715-728
The late Cretaceous to early Tertiary Great Tonalite Sill of southeast
Alaska and British Columbia is a very long (approximately 1,000 km) a
nd thin (<25 km), orogen-parallel, composite batholith, which lies bet
ween the Insular superterrane (including the Alexander and Wrangellia
terranes) and the Intermontane superterrane (including the Stikine and
Cache Creek terranes). The batholith is delineated by many steep, she
et-like plutons, which are dominated by northwest-southeast-striking c
oncordant fabrics with steep lineations that formed during deformation
in a country-rock shear zone prior to the complete crystallization of
the magmas. Deformation in this shear zone is dominated by northeast-
southwest-directed contraction orthogonal to the orogenic strike, asso
ciated with a component of northeast over southwest, high-angle shear.
The steep, multiple-dike-like nature of the body and its emplacement
during orogenic contraction imply that ascent and emplacement have bee
n achieved by dike-wedging mechanisms along the deep-reaching shear zo
ne. The remarkable narrowness of the Great Tonalite Sill is probably t
he result of melting at the base of a very localized zone of thickened
crust produced by the associated narrow contractional shear zone exte
nding along the orogen length. Such a shear zone of Late Cretaceous to
early Tertiary age, lying along 800 km of the possible boundary betwe
en the Insular and Intermontane superterranes, implies that it may rep
resent the actual boundary between them. If this hypothesis is correct
, it implies that the large-scale tectonic regime during emplacement o
f the Great Tonalite Sill was predominantly orthogonal and not oblique
ly dextral as has been indicated from paleomagnetic data.