Precambrian Research | 2019

Athapuscow aulacogen revisited: Geochronology and geochemistry of the 2046 Ma Union Island Group mafic magmatism, East Arm of Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories, Canada

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract The Slave craton underwent widespread extension during the Paleoproterozoic. The East Arm basin of Great Slave Lake formed during this period and preserves a protracted record of sedimentation and volcanism in the southeastern Slave craton. Within the East Arm basin package, the Union Island Group represents voluminous mafic volcanism with subordinate sedimentary strata. We report the first high precision U–Pb zircon and baddeleyite dates for the Union Island Group; 2045.8\u202f±\u202f1.0\u202fMa for a volcaniclastic unit from the lower basalt formation and 2042.7\u202f±\u202f3.0\u202fMa for a diabase intrusion within volcaniclastic horizons in the lower basalt formation. We fundamentally revise the lower basin stratigraphy and demonstrate that the Union Island Group is the oldest identified supracrustal package in the East Arm basin, ∼120\u202fMyr older than previously thought. This revised stratigraphy is supported by detrital zircon provenance age distribution in two Union Island Group sedimentary samples, which is dominated by 2.76–2.56\u202fGa ages, reflecting prominent input from the local Archean Slave basement. The Union Island Group contains two geochemically distinct mafic volcanic packages. The lower basalt package is predominantly alkaline, characterized by an OIB-like chemical signature with high and variable incompatible element contents (108–438\u202fppm Zr, 13–62\u202fppm Nb). In contrast, the upper basalt package is tholeiitic, contains much lower and uniform incompatible element contents (83–101\u202fppm Zr, 2–4\u202fppm Nb), and has an E-MORB-like chemical signature. Both packages display overlapping, depleted time-integrated eNd(i) values (+1.1 to +3.2). Petrological modeling suggests the lower package originated as OIB-like melts from the asthenosphere that interacted with a depleted reservoir; the upper package was produced by larger degree of partial melting of a similar mantle source, in addition to possible lithospheric input. The petrogenesis established in this study is consistent with a passive continental rift origin for the Union Island Group magmatism and is further supported by geochemical similarities with Proterozoic and Phanerozoic rift successions. We therefore propose that the 2046\u202fMa Union Island Group represents an incipient rift basin sequence formed during Paleoproterozoic extension that marked the initial breakup of the southern margin of the Slave craton from a pre-Laurentia supercontinent.

Volume 321
Pages 85-102
DOI 10.1016/J.PRECAMRES.2018.11.012
Language English
Journal Precambrian Research

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