1991
DOI: 10.1017/s0016756800018008
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A Cambrian island arc in Iapetus: geochronology and geochemistry of the Lake Ambrose volcanic belt, Newfoundland Appalachians

Abstract: The Lake Ambrose volcanic belt (LAVB) outcrops as a 45 km long northeast-trending belt of mafic and felsic volcanic rocks along the eastern side of the Victoria Lake Group in southcentral Newfoundland. It comprises roughly equal proportions of mafic pillow basalt and high silica rhyolite, locally interbedded with epiclastic turbidites. Volcanic rocks have been metamorphosed in the greenschist facies and are extensively carbonatized.U-Pb (zircon) dates from rhyolite at two, widely separated localities give iden… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…The Annidale Group could represent one of many arcs that developed near the southern margin of the Iapetus Ocean. This interpretation is supported by workers in New foundland (e.g., Dunning et al, 1991) who have established the presence of at least one, and consider the possibly of several, Lower Paleozoic arcs and back-arc basins marginal to the Iapetus Ocean. As in Newfoundland, the development of the southeastern side of Iapetus in New Brunswick may have been more complex than previously suggested (e.g., .…”
Section: Y//a C O N T a C T R E L A T I O N S H I P U N K N O W N > Psupporting
confidence: 54%
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“…The Annidale Group could represent one of many arcs that developed near the southern margin of the Iapetus Ocean. This interpretation is supported by workers in New foundland (e.g., Dunning et al, 1991) who have established the presence of at least one, and consider the possibly of several, Lower Paleozoic arcs and back-arc basins marginal to the Iapetus Ocean. As in Newfoundland, the development of the southeastern side of Iapetus in New Brunswick may have been more complex than previously suggested (e.g., .…”
Section: Y//a C O N T a C T R E L A T I O N S H I P U N K N O W N > Psupporting
confidence: 54%
“…If it is assumed that the volcanic-sedimentary rocks in the Annidale Group developed on sialic crust, then two types of basement are most likely: (1) an older arc like the Cambrian arc in Newfoundland (Dunning et al, 1991) or (2) Avalon crust. Apparent inheritance in the zircons of sample 2, which provides a possible age of source rocks in the vicinity of 1000 Ma, favors the latter possibility because rocks of the this age may occur in the Avalon Terrane (Nance, 1987).…”
Section: Y//a C O N T a C T R E L A T I O N S H I P U N K N O W N > Pmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…540 Ma) events. During the Ordovician, the oceanward edge rocks exhibit evidence of interaction with Iapetan crust, either along or offshore the eastern proto-Atlantic margin (e.g., Dunning and S. J. O'Brien, 1989;Dunning et al, 1991;, and record an early Paleozoic history unlike that seen elsewhere along the belt. Their magmatic and tectonothermal history indicates interaction of Avalonian and Iapetan rocks before, during, and following Ordovician (Penobscot) orogenesis on the eastern margin of the Iapetus Ocean Tucker et al, 1994).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is possible that some deformation of the lowgrade basement was synchronous with the Early Ordovician bimodal magmatism and related metamorphism. Emplacement of the plutons is coeval with a major period of arc magmatism recorded in the peri-Gondwanan successions of the Dunnage Zone (cf., Evans et al, 1990;Dunning et al, 1991).…”
Section: S J O'brien and Othersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Traditional models of Appalachian orogenesis have recently been challenged by paleomagnetic. paleontologic, geochronologic and structural data indicating a more complex sequence of events, in which several different arc sequences developed at the same time but in different places, and were later juxtaposed during closure of the Iapetus ocean (van der Pluijm, 1986;Dunning et al, 1991;van der Pluijm et al, 1993;de Roo and van Staal, 1994;van Staal and de Roo, 1996;Dalziel et al, 1994). In this study, we examine the structural setting of a group of volcanic rocks in the Exploits Subzone of central Newfoundland's Dunnage Zone that have proven critical in determining the ages of magmatism and the relative positions of the different volcanic sequences of central Newfoundland.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%