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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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North America
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Appalachians
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Blue Ridge Province (1)
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Piedmont (1)
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Valley and Ridge Province (1)
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United States
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District of Columbia (1)
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Maryland (1)
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Potomac River (1)
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Virginia (1)
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geologic age
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Paleozoic
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Carboniferous
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Mississippian (1)
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Devonian (1)
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Ordovician (1)
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Permian (1)
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Precambrian
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Catoctin Formation (1)
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upper Precambrian
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Proterozoic
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Mesoproterozoic (1)
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Primary terms
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faults (1)
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folds (1)
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foliation (1)
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metamorphism (1)
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North America
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Appalachians
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Blue Ridge Province (1)
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Piedmont (1)
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Valley and Ridge Province (1)
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Paleozoic
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Carboniferous
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Mississippian (1)
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Devonian (1)
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Ordovician (1)
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Permian (1)
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Precambrian
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Catoctin Formation (1)
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upper Precambrian
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Proterozoic
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Mesoproterozoic (1)
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United States
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District of Columbia (1)
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Maryland (1)
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Potomac River (1)
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Virginia (1)
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Abstract This field trip highlights the current understanding of the tectonic assemblage of the rocks of the Central Appalachians, which include the Coastal Plain, Piedmont, and Blue Ridge provinces. The age and origin of the rocks, the timing of regional deformation and metamorphism, and the significance of the major faults, provide the framework of the tectonic history which includes the Mesoproterozoic Grenvillian, Ordovician Taconian, Devonian to Mississippian Neoacadian, and Mississippian to Permian Alleghanian orogenies.
The Baltimore Gneiss, exposed in antiforms in the eastern Maryland Piedmont, consists of a suite of felsic and mafic gneisses of Mesoproterozoic age. Zircons from the felsic gneisses are complexly zoned, as shown in cathodoluminescence imaging; most zircon grains have multiple overgrowth zones, some of which are adjacent and parallel to elongate cores. Sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP) analyses of oscillatory-zoned cores indicate that the volcanic protoliths of the felsic gneisses crystallized at ca. 1.25 Ga. These rocks were subsequently affected by at least three Mesoproterozoic growth events, at ca. 1.22, 1.16, and 1.02 Ga. Foliated biotite granite intruded the Baltimore Gneiss metavolcanic sequence at ca. 1075 Ma. The Slaughterhouse Granite (renamed herein) also is Mesoproterozoic, but extremely discordant U-Pb data from high-U, metamict zircons preclude calculating a precise age. The 1.25 Ga rocks of the Baltimore Gneiss are coeval with rocks emplaced in the Grenville Province during the Elzevirian orogeny, and the 1.22 Ga zircon overgrowths are coincident with a later stage of this event. Younger zircon overgrowths formed during the Ottawan phase of the Grenville orogeny. Backscattered electron imaging of titanites from felsic gneisses and foliated biotite granite reveals that many of the grains contain cores, intermediate mantles, and rims. Electron microprobe traverses across zoned grains show regular variations in composition. SHRIMP ages for titanite from the foliated biotite granite are 374 ± 8, 336 ± 8, and 301 ± 12 Ma. The ca. 374 Ma age suggests growth of titanite during a thermal event following the Acadian orogeny, whereas the late Paleozoic titanite growth ages may be due to greenschist-facies replacement reactions associated with Alleghanian metamorphism and deformation.