The Blake River Group, Rouyn-Noranda Area, Quebec: A Stratigraphic Synthesis

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
A. Shirley Péloquin Robin Potvin Suzanne Paradis Marc R. Laflèche Pierre Verpaelst Harold L. Glbson
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
12
File Size:
1811 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1990

Abstract

"The Archean Blake River Group is best known from a central volcanic complex in Rouyn-Noranda. This volcano-tectonic depression, delimited by the Hunter Creek fault to the north and the Horne Creek fault to the south, is interpreted to be a cauldron approximately 20 km in diameter. Its western and eastern boundaries are the Flavrian Plutonand the D'Alembert shear zone respectively. The complex has an exposed stratigraphic thickness of 10.5 km. Two cycles, composed of andesitic units overlain by bimodal, andesite - rhyolite units, are observed in the area, and are, in turn, overlain by an andesitic unit interpreted to be the lower part of a third cycle.The southern sector of the Blake River Group, south of the central volcanic complex, is considered to be outside the limits of the cauldron, but partly contemporaneous with it. The maximum stratigraphic thickness exposed in this area is 4 .6 km. At least two cycles occur in this sector. The oldest unit, a pre-cauldron andesitic to basaltic unit, occurs only in the southern part of the sector. In the north, two partial andesite - bimodal cycles, interpreted as contemporaneous with the cauldron volcanism, are observed.The eastern sector of the Blake River Group, east of the central volcanic complex, apparently overlies the complex. Two units are observed in this sector: a lower bimodal unit and an uper andesitic unit. The bimodal unit is coupled with the uppermost andesitic unit of the central volcanic complex to form a cycle, and the andesitic unit is considered to be the uppermost unit of the Blake River Group. The total exposed stratigraphic thickness in the sector is 2.5 km.The western sector of the Blake River Group, north and west of the central volcanic complex, is interpreted as the lateral equivalent of the complex. Three andesite - bimodal cycles are exposed in this sector, giving a total stratigraphic thickness of9 .5 km. The two lower cycles correspond directly to the central volcanic complex cycles; this correlation is facilitated by two stratigraphic marker units observed on either side of the Hunter Creek fault: the Fish-roe rhyolite flow, east of the Flavrian pluton, and a spherulitic rhyolite lapilli-tuff, west of the Flavrian pluton.Many of the volcanogenic massive sulphide deposits found in the central volcanic complex are spatially and temporally associated with synvolcanic faults, and felsic domes and feeder dykes that are the sites of felsic volcanism in the bimodal units. However, these features also occur outside the central volcanic complex, and the similarities recognized in this work between the complex and the surrounding area suggest that such deposits need not be restricted to the central volcanic complex. The presence of volcanogenic massive sulphide deposits outside the complex confirms this."
Citation

APA: A. Shirley Péloquin Robin Potvin Suzanne Paradis Marc R. Laflèche Pierre Verpaelst Harold L. Glbson  (1990)  The Blake River Group, Rouyn-Noranda Area, Quebec: A Stratigraphic Synthesis

MLA: A. Shirley Péloquin Robin Potvin Suzanne Paradis Marc R. Laflèche Pierre Verpaelst Harold L. Glbson The Blake River Group, Rouyn-Noranda Area, Quebec: A Stratigraphic Synthesis. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1990.

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