|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
| JOURNAL HOME | HELP | CONTACT PUBLISHER | SUBSCRIBE | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
,11 385 Carlo Drive, Goleta, California 93117, USA
An investigation of a normal-fault system in the southern Canadian Cordillera documents extensional shear zones exhumed from the middle crust, including the root of a transfer zone between overstepping fault segments in which shearing was enhanced by leucogranitic melts. The western margin of the Shuswap metamorphic core complex is delimited by west-dipping, ductile-brittle normal faults of the Eocene Okanagan Valley fault system. Migmatites with gently dipping mylonitic fabrics have been exhumed in the footwalls of the OkanaganEagle River and AdamsNorth Thompson fault segments. The mylonitic fabrics formed in upper amphibolite facies, continued to evolve in greenschist facies, and display asymmetric features that consistently indicate westward movement of the hanging wall. The Shuswap Lake transfer zone is a 45-km-wide left stepover between the two fault segments where a domed mylonitic shear zone has been exhumed and cut by high-angle brittle faults. Mylonites in the transfer zone display the same sense of shear as the mylonites that are associated with the overstepping fault segments. All of these mylonites are interpreted as having formed in a mid-crustal shear zone in which the fault system was rooted. The mylonites in the transfer zone are distinct, however, in that they formed in leucogranite (the Pukeashun granite). Structural relationships imply that the leucogranitic melts were emplaced during extensional shearing and that their distribution may have been influenced by preexisting structures in both the footwall and the hanging wall of the system. The melts in turn controlled the evolution of the transfer zone, facilitating the processes of heterogeneous extension, footwall doming, and differential exhumation.
Key Words: extension tectonics normal faults transfer zones melts metamorphic core complexes Cordillera
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
A. M. Hinchey and S. D. Carr PROTOLITH COMPOSITION OF CORDIERITE-GEDRITE BASEMENT ROCKS AND GARNET AMPHIBOLITE OF THE BEARPAW LAKE AREA OF THE THOR-ODIN DOME, MONASHEE COMPLEX, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA Can Mineral, June 1, 2007; 45(3): 607 - 629. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. Kruse and P. F. Williams The Monashee reflection: Re-examination of a Lithoprobe crustal-scale seismic reflection in the southern Canadian Cordillera Geosphere, February 1, 2007; 3(1): 26 - 41. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. D. Carr and P. S. Simony Ductile thrusting versus channel flow in the southeastern Canadian Cordillera: evolution of a coherent crystalline thrust sheet Geological Society, London, Special Publications, January 1, 2006; 268(1): 561 - 587. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||
| JOURNAL HOME | HELP | CONTACT PUBLISHER | SUBSCRIBE | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |