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Dive into the research topics where Douglas W. Rankin is active.

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Featured researches published by Douglas W. Rankin.


American Journal of Science | 2007

A comparative analysis of pre-Silurian crustal building blocks of the northern and the southern Appalachian orogen

James P. Hibbard; Cees R. van Staal; Douglas W. Rankin

The New York promontory serves as the divide between the northern and southern segments of the Appalachian orogen. Antiquated subdivisions, distinct for each segment, implied that they had lithotectonic histories that were independent of each other. Using new lithotectonic subdivisions we compare first order features of the pre-Silurian orogenic ’building blocks’ in order to test the validity of the implication of independent lithotectonic histories for the two segments. Three lithotectonic divisions, termed here the Laurentian, Iapetan, and the peri-Gondwanan realms, characterize the entire orogen. The Laurentian realm, composed of native North American rocks, is remarkably uniform for the length of the orogen. It records the multistage Neoproterozoic-early Paleozoic rift-drift history of the Appalachian passive margin, formation of a Taconic Seaway, and the ultimate demise of both in the Middle Ordovician. The Iapetan realm encompasses mainly oceanic and magmatic arc tracts that once lay within the Iapetus Ocean, between Laurentia and Gondwana. In the northern segment, the realm is divisible on the basis of stratigraphy and faunal provinciality into peri-Laurentian and peri-Gondwanan tracts that were amalgamated in the Late Ordovician. South of New York, stratigraphic and faunal controls decrease markedly; rock associations are not inconsistent with those of the northern Appalachians, although second-order differences exist. Exposed exotic crustal blocks of the peri-Gondwanan realm include Ganderia, Avalonia, and Meguma in the north, and Carolinia in the south. Carolinia most closely resembles Ganderia, both in early evolution and Late Ordovician-Silurian docking to Laurentia. Our comparison indicates that, to a first order, the pre-Silurian Appalachian orogen developed uniformly, starting with complex rifting and a subsequent drift phase to form the Appalachian margin, followed by the consolidation of Iapetan components and ending with accretion of the peri-Gonwanan Ganderia and Carolinia. This deduction implies that any first-order differences between northern and southern segments post-date Late Ordovician consolidation of a large portion of the orogen.


Geological Society of America Bulletin | 1972

Major Structural Break between Paleozoic and Mesozoic Rocks in the Eastern Sierra Nevada, California

Benjamin A. Morgan; Douglas W. Rankin

A major structural break lies between the Paleozoic and Mesozoic rocks in the eastern Sierra Nevada. Tight folds in the Paleozoic section are overturned to the west and faulted against an apparently downthrown steeply dipping sequence of Mesozoic metavolcanic rocks on the west. This fault is a segment of a large regional high-angle fault that separates the Paleozoic and Mesozoic strata in the eastern Sierra Nevada from the Pine Creek pendant northward approximately 50 mi (80 km) to Mount Dana. The development of this fault preceded the widespread intrusions of the Upper Cretaceous magmas of the John Muir sequence of the Sierra Nevada batholith.


Geological Society of America Bulletin | 2013

Reevaluation of the Piermont-Frontenac allochthon in the Upper Connecticut Valley: Restoration of a coherent Boundary Mountains–Bronson Hill stratigraphic sequence

Douglas W. Rankin; Robert D. Tucker; Yuri Amelin

The regional extent and mode and time of emplacement of the Piermont-Frontenac allochthon in the Boundary Mountains–Bronson Hill anticlinorium of the Upper Connecticut Valley, New Hampshire–Vermont, are controversial. Moench and coworkers beginning in the 1980s proposed that much of the autochthonous pre–Middle Ordovician section of the anticlinorium was a large allochthon of Silurian to Early Devonian rocks correlated to those near Rangeley, Maine. This ∼200-km-long allochthon was postulated to have been transported westward in the latest Silurian to Early Devonian as a soft-sediment gravity slide on a hypothesized Foster Hill fault. New mapping and U-Pb geochronology do not support this interpretation. The undisputed Rangeley sequence in the Bean Brook slice is different from the disputed sequence in the proposed larger Piermont-Frontenac allochthon, and field evidence for the Foster Hill fault is lacking. At the type locality on Foster Hill, the postulated “fault” is a stratigraphic contact within the Ordovician Ammonoosuc Volcanics. The proposed Foster Hill fault would place the Piermont-Frontenac allochthon over the inverted limb of the Cornish(?) nappe, which includes the Emsian Littleton Formation, thus limiting the alleged submarine slide to post-Emsian time. Mafic dikes of the 419 Ma Comerford Intrusive Complex intrude previously folded strata attributed to the larger Piermont-Frontenac allochthon as well as the autochthonous Albee Formation and Ammonoosuc Volcanics. The Lost Nation pluton intruded and produced hornfels in previously deformed Albee strata. Zircons from an apophysis of the pluton in the hornfels have a thermal ionization mass spectrometry 207 Pb/ 206 Pb age of 444.1 ± 2.1 Ma. Tonalite near Bath, New Hampshire, has a zircon sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe 206 Pb/ 238 U age of 492.5 ± 7.8 Ma. The tonalite intrudes the Albee Formation, formerly interpreted as the Silurian Perry Mountain Formation of the proposed allochthon. Collectively, these features indicate that the large Piermont-Frontenac allochthon gravity slide of Silurian-Devonian strata, as previously proposed, cannot exist. Allochthonous rocks are restricted to a 25 km 2 klippe, the Bean Brook slice, emplaced by hard-rock thrusting in the post-Emsian Devonian. The Albee Formation, the oldest unit in the study area, is older than the Late Cambrian tonalite at Bath. The correlation and apparent continuity along strike to the northeast of the Albee Formation with the Dead River Formation suggest that the Albee Formation, like the Dead River Formation, is of Ganderian affinity and that the Bronson Hill magmatic arc in the Upper Connecticut Valley was built on Ganderian crust. The Dead River Formation is unconformably overlain by Middle and Upper Ordovician volcanic units; the unconformity is attributed to the pre-Arenig Penobscottian orogeny. Some of the pre-Silurian deformation in the Upper Connecticut Valley may be Penobscottian rather than Taconian. New stratigraphic units defined herein include the pelitic Scarritt Member of the Albee Formation, the Ordovician Washburn Brook Formation consisting of synsedimentary breccia and coticule, chert, and ironstone, and the Devonian–Silurian Sawyer Mountain Formation, probably correlative with the Frontenac Formation. The Partridge Formation is partially coeval with the Ammonoosuc Volcanics.


Geological Society of America Bulletin | 2006

The Piermont allochthon revisited and redefined at its type locality: Discussion

Douglas W. Rankin; Robert D. Tucker

[Timms (2004)][1] has made a significant contribution to understanding a controversial structural feature of central New England: the Piermont allochthon (see [Hadley, 1942][2], [1950][3]; [Rumble, 1969][4]; [Moench, 1990][5], [1992][6], [1996][7], [1999][8]; [Billings, 1992][9]; [Rankin, 1996][10


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1976

Appalachian salients and recesses: Late Precambrian continental breakup and the opening of the Iapetus Ocean

Douglas W. Rankin


American Journal of Science | 1995

U-Pb ages of metarhyolites of the Catoctin and Mount Rogers formations, central and southern Appalachians: evidence for two pulses of Iapetan rifting

John N. Aleinikoff; Robert E. Zartman; Marianne Walter; Douglas W. Rankin; Peter T. Lyttle; William C. Burton


Geological Society of America Special Papers | 1989

Tectonostratigraphic terranes and their Paleozoic boundaries in the central and southern Appalachians

J. Wright Horton; Avery Ala Drake; Douglas W. Rankin


Precambrian Research | 2004

Neoproterozoic A-type granitoids of the central and southern Appalachians: intraplate magmatism associated with episodic rifting of the Rodinian supercontinent

Richard P. Tollo; John N. Aleinikoff; Mervin J. Bartholomew; Douglas W. Rankin


Geological Society of America Memoirs | 2010

Comparative analysis of the geological evolution of the northern and southern Appalachian orogen: Late Ordovician-Permian

James P. Hibbard; Cees R. van Staal; Douglas W. Rankin


Archive | 1993

Proterozoic rocks east and southeast of the Grenville front

Douglas W. Rankin; Jeffrey R. Chiarenzelli; Avery Ala Drake; Richard Goldsmith; Lisa Hall; William J. Hinze; Yngvar W. Isachsen; Edward G. Lidiak; James M. McLelland; S. Mosher; Nicholas M. Ratcliffe; Donald T. Secor; Philip R. Whitney

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John N. Aleinikoff

United States Geological Survey

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Richard P. Tollo

George Washington University

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Avery Ala Drake

United States Geological Survey

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Arthur J. Merschat

United States Geological Survey

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J. Wright Horton

United States Geological Survey

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James P. Hibbard

North Carolina State University

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Nicholas M. Ratcliffe

United States Geological Survey

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Robert D. Tucker

United States Geological Survey

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Scott Southworth

United States Geological Survey

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Cees R. van Staal

Geological Survey of Canada

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