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Geologic history of the Pine Mountain Window, Alabama and Georgia; insights from a new geologic map and U-Pb isotopic dates

M. G. Steltenpohl, Robert D. Hatcher, Paul A. Mueller, A. L. Heatherington and J. L. Wooden
Geologic history of the Pine Mountain Window, Alabama and Georgia; insights from a new geologic map and U-Pb isotopic dates (in From Rodinia to Pangea; the lithotectonic record of the Appalachian region, Richard P. Tollo (editor), Mervin J. Bartholomew (editor), James P. Hibbard (editor) and Paul M. Karabinos (editor))
Memoir - Geological Society of America (2010) 206: 837-857

Abstract

We present a newly compiled geologic map of the Pine Mountain window based on available 1:24,000 (and smaller) scale geologic maps; this map provides an improved basis to reconcile long-standing issues regarding tectonic evolution. We integrate sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP) single-grain U-Pb ages of igneous, metamorphic, and detrital zircons from Grenville basement rocks, associated metasedimentary units, and cover rocks to help clarify the pre-Appalachian history and to better delimit the distribution of Laurentian versus peri-Gondwanan and Gondwanan units along the southeast flank of the window. U-Pb results indicate that some units, which earlier had been correlated with Neoproterozoic to Early Cambrian Laurentian rift deposits of the Ocoee Supergroup (i.e., Sparks-Halawaka Schist), actually are supracrustal rocks deposited prior to approximately 1100 Ma that were intruded and metamorphosed during the Ottawan phase of the Grenville Orogeny. Zircons from the Phelps Creek Gneiss are 425 + or - 7 Ma and overlap in time with plutons that intruded rocks of the Carolina Superterrane during the Silurian (i.e., the Concord-Salisbury suite). The host units to the Phelps Creek Gneiss had also previously been interpreted as Sparks-Halawaka Schist, but field relations combine with the Silurian intrusive age to suggest that they rather belong to the peri-Gondwanan Carolina Superterrane, helping to refine the position of the Central Piedmont suture in its most southern exposures. Results suggest that the Pine Mountain window is not framed by a single fault, but by Alleghanian faults of different timing, rheology, and kinematics, some of which were reactivated while others were not. The new map and U-Pb dates reveal that the southwesternmost exposures of the Central Piedmont suture are located farther northwest, so the width of the Pine Mountain window narrows from 22 km wide in central Georgia to only 5 km in Alabama. At its narrowest, the flanks of the Pine Mountain window are marked by two relatively thin normal faults (the Towaliga and Shiloh Faults, northwest and southeast, respectively) that have excised the wider, earlier-formed mylonite zones. All of the Alleghanian faults are cut by later high-angle, normal and left- and right-slip brittle faults (Mesozoic?), which also influenced the present configuration of the window.


ISSN: 0072-1069
Coden: GSAMAQ
Serial Title: Memoir - Geological Society of America
Serial Volume: 206
Title: Geologic history of the Pine Mountain Window, Alabama and Georgia; insights from a new geologic map and U-Pb isotopic dates
Title: From Rodinia to Pangea; the lithotectonic record of the Appalachian region
Author(s): Steltenpohl, M. G.Hatcher, Robert D., Jr.Mueller, Paul A.Heatherington, A. L.Wooden, J. L.
Author(s): Tollo, Richard P.editor
Author(s): Bartholomew, Mervin J.editor
Author(s): Hibbard, James P.editor
Author(s): Karabinos, Paul M.editor
Affiliation: Auburn University, Department of Geology, Auburn, AL, United States
Affiliation: George Washington University, Geological Sciences Program, Washington, DC, United States
Pages: 837-857
Published: 2010
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
References: 126
Accession Number: 2011-102877
Categories: Structural geologyIgneous and metamorphic petrology
Document Type: Serial Map
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. sect., 2 tables, geol. sketch map
N31°00'00" - N37°00'00", W88°00'00" - W74°00'00"
Secondary Affiliation: University of Memphis, USA, United StatesNorth Carolina State University, USA, United StatesWilliams College, USA, United StatesUniversity of Tennessee, USA, United StatesUniversity of Florida, USA, United StatesStanford University, USA, United States
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2019, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
Update Code: 201152

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