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Caledonian Highlands

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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 05 December 2023
GSA Bulletin (2024) 136 (7-8): 3479–3484.
.../htm/map_2000-001.asp ), and Newfoundland and Labrador ( https://geoatlas.gov.nl.ca/ ) do not follow the lithostratigraphic framework of Landing et al., and prefer maintaining former subdivisions based on Pickerill and Tanoli (1985) in the Caledonian Highlands, Hutchinson (1952) in Nova Scotia...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 05 December 2023
GSA Bulletin (2024) 136 (7-8): 3472–3478.
... and abbreviations. Our concerns with Álvaro et al.’s (2023) synthesis of this diagnostic cover sequence include: (1) use of a rift/half graben model in a small part of Avalonia (Caledonian Highlands, SW New Brunswick, Canada) although a strike-slip regime is supported by regional study of North American...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 30 August 2022
GSA Bulletin (2023) 135 (5-6): 1225–1242.
... to marginal rift branches. Terreneuvian‒Miaolingian third-order sequences of the Caledonian Highlands, New Brunswick, Canada, reflect a complex interplay among syn-rift tectonic events, denudation pulses, and sea-level fluctuations. Unconformably overlying the early, rift-related volcanosedimentary Coldbrook...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 February 1996
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1996) 33 (2): 156–168.
...S. M. Barr; C. E. White Abstract The Caledonian Highlands of southern New Brunswick consist of Late Proterozoic to Cambrian rocks generally considered typical of the Avalon terrane of the northern Appalachian Orogen. Mainly tuffaceous volcanic and sedimentary rocks of the Broad River Group...
Journal Article
Published: 21 February 2023
Journal of the Geological Society (2023) 180 (2): jgs2022-076.
... the Northern Highlands before slab breakoff, probably restricted by crustal thickening during the c. 450 Ma Grampian 2 event. Extensive new in situ geochemical–geochronological studies for this terrane may further substantiate the deep crustal hot zone model and the association between Caledonian magmatism...
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Journal Article
Journal: Lithosphere
Publisher: GSW
Published: 23 March 2018
Lithosphere (2018) 10 (3): 406–425.
... of the cooling history from seven different field sites across the western Scottish Highlands using radiogenic apatite helium thermochronometry ([U-Th]/He; n = 14; ca. 31–363 Ma) and thermal modeling confirm that post-Caledonian heating and burial, as well as cooling and exhumation, must have been variable...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2010
Journal of the Geological Society (2010) 167 (2): 297–302.
... important implications for recently published petrogenetic models of this sector of the Scottish Caledonides ( Atherton & Ghani 2002 ; Neilson et al . 2009 ). New Re–Os molybdenite geochronology from the SW Scottish Highlands has important implications for petrogenetic models of the Caledonian...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2009
Scottish Journal of Geology (2009) 45 (2): 117–130.
...I. Neill; W. E. Stephens Synopsis The Cluanie Pluton is a late Caledonian granitoid emplaced into the Glenfinnan Division of the Moine Supergroup in the NW Scottish Highlands. A field investigation of the pluton and its internal facies is presented along with new major- and trace-element whole-rock...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2006
Scottish Journal of Geology (2006) 42 (2): 149–159.
... coincident with the climax of the Grampian orogenic phase of the Caledonian Orogeny ( McKerrow et al. 2000 ) in the Scottish Highlands. Geochronological constraints for Grampian orogenesis indicate that peak deformation, magmatism and regional metamorphism occurred within an interval of c. 10 Ma, between...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2005
Journal of the Geological Society (2005) 162 (5): 741–744.
... as emphasizing the NW to SE diachronous nature of the end of Caledonian magmatism across Scotland. 13 6 2005 15 3 2005 © 2005 The Geological Society of London 2005 Caledonian Orogeny Etive Dyke Swarm Grampian Highlands absolute age The Caledonian Orogeny in Scotland was accompanied...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1999
Journal of the Geological Society (1999) 156 (6): 1195–1204.
... discontinuities within the Scottish Highlands, we question current correlations with Laurentian passive margin sequences, and the inferences that the rocks of the Grampian Block only experienced a simple Caledonian (Palaeozoic) orogenic history. 26 1 1998 3 5 1999 © Geological Society of London...
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 1996
Journal of the Geological Society (1996) 153 (2): 331–333.
... Hutton D. H. W. Igneous emplacement in a shear zone termination: the biotite granite at Strontian, Scotland Geological Society of America Bulletin 1988 100 1392 1399 Jacques J. M. Reavy R. J. Caledonian plutonism and major lineaments in the SW Scottish Highlands Journal...
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1994
Journal of the Geological Society (1994) 151 (6): 955–969.
...J. M. JACQUES; R. J. REAVY Abstract Within the SW Grampian Highlands several NE–SW-trending shear zones and faults related to the Caledonian transpressional collision are recognized as being distinct from an intersect­ing set of NW–SE-trending pre-Caledonian crustal lineaments which were...
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 1983
Geological Magazine (1983) 120 (1): 37–49.
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1982
Geological Magazine (1982) 119 (2): 169–180.
Journal Article
Published: 01 October 1991
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1991) 28 (10): 1594–1612.
...Marc Foisy; Gilbert Prichonnet Abstract Sedimentological and petrographical data obtained from five sections located north and south of the Caledonian Highlands in southeastern New Brunswick demonstrate the existence of three main till units and one glaciofluvial unit, which have been grouped...
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1995
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1995) 32 (12): 2147–2158.
...A. L. Grammatikopoulos; Sandra M. Barr; P. H. Reynolds; R. Doig Abstract The Mechanic Settlement Pluton, located at the northern margin of the Caledonian Highlands in southern New Brunswick, is composed of rocks ranging from ultramafic (lherzolite, plagioclase-bearing lherzolite) through mafic...
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 1994
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1994) 31 (5): 818–824.
...R. David Dallmeyer; R. Damian Nance Abstract Several variably deformed and metamorphosed, late Precambrian volcanic–sedimentary successions have been recognized within the Avalon composite terrane exposed in the Caledonian Highlands of southern New Brunswick. Whole-rock samples of metasedimentary...
Journal Article
Published: 09 January 2023
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2023) 60 (4): 442–462.
...Alicia P. Escribano; Sandra M. Barr; James L. Crowley The Coldbrook Group and related plutons in the Caledonian Highlands of southern New Brunswick contain voluminous late Ediacaran silicic rocks formed in a magmatic event not recognized in other parts of Avalonia in the northern Appalachian orogen...
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Series: GSA Special Papers
Published: 21 June 2022
DOI: 10.1130/2022.2557(13)
EISBN: 9780813795577
... the Caledonian highlands. These deposits form shingled strata uniformly east-dipping with a total accumulation of sediment of ~25 km, and that today stand in positive relief. The little-metamorphosed sedimentary rocks are separated from the underlying Western Gneiss Region (WGR) and Scandian nappes (Lower...
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