“…Coeval Franklin sills and dikes intrude the Shaler Supergroup (Baragar, 1976;Rainbird, 1993;Hulbert et al, 2005). These rocks were gently folded about ENE-trending axes, eroded, and then overlain by a Paleozoic clastic and carbonate sequence (Thorsteinsson and Tozer, 1962;Mathieu et al, 2013;Durbano et al, 2015), and subsequently cut by a prominent E-to NE-trending normal fault system (Bédard et al, 2012;Dewing et al, 2013). The Shaler Supergroup consists of a sequence of dominantly carbonate rocks (including abundant stromatolites) with subordinate clastics and sulfate evaporites, which are collectively interpreted to represent shallow-water intracontinental basin deposits (Young, 1981;Rainbird, 1993;Thomson et al, 2014).…”