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SHRIMP U–Pb geochronology of Mesoproterozoic basement and overlying Ocoee Supergroup, NC–TN: dating diagenetic xenotime and monazite overgrowths on detrital minerals to determine the age of sedimentary deposition
Geology along the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia
Abstract Detailed geologic mapping and new SHRIMP (sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe) U-Pb zircon, Ar/Ar, Lu-Hf, 14 C, luminescence (optically stimulated), thermochronology (fission-track), and palynology reveal the complex Mesoproterozoic to Quaternary geology along the ~350 km length of the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia. Traversing the boundary of the central and southern Appalachians, rocks along the parkway showcase the transition from the para-autochthonous Blue Ridge anticlinorium of northern and central Virginia to the allochthonous eastern Blue Ridge in southern Virginia. From mile post (MP) 0 near Waynesboro, Virginia, to ~MP 124 at Roanoke, the parkway crosses the unconformable to faulted boundary between Mesoproterozoic basement in the core of the Blue Ridge anticlinorium and Neoproterozoic to Cambrian metasedimentary and metavolcanic cover rocks on the western limb of the structure. Mesoproterozoic basement rocks comprise two groups based on SHRIMP U-Pb zircon geochronology: Group I rocks (1.2-1.14 Ga) are strongly foliated orthogneisses, and Group II rocks (1.08-1.00 Ga) are granitoids that mostly lack obvious Mesoproterozoic deformational features. Neoproterozoic to Cambrian cover rocks on the west limb of the anticlinorium include the Swift Run and Catoctin Formations, and constituent formations of the Chilhowee Group. These rocks unconformably overlie basement, or abut basement along steep reverse faults. Rocks of the Chilhowee Group are juxtaposed against Cambrian rocks of the Valley and Ridge province along southeast- and northwest-dipping, high-angle reverse faults. South of the James River (MP 64), Chilhowee Group and basement rocks occupy the hanging wall of the nearly flat-lying Blue Ridge thrust fault and associated splays. South of the Red Valley high-strain zone (MP 144.5), the parkway crosses into the wholly allochthonous eastern Blue Ridge, comprising metasedimentary and meta-igneous rocks assigned to the Wills Ridge, Ashe, and Alligator Back Formations. These rocks are bound by numerous faults, including the Rock Castle Creek fault that separates Ashe Formation rocks from Alligator Back Formation rocks in the core of the Ararat River synclinorium. The lack of unequivocal paleontologic or geochronologic ages for any of these rock sequences, combined with fundamental and conflicting differences in tectonogenetic models, compound the problem of regional correlation with Blue Ridge cover rocks to the north. The geologic transition from the central to southern Appalachians is also marked by a profound change in landscape and surficial deposits. In central Virginia, the Blue Ridge consists of narrow ridges that are held up by resistant but contrasting basement and cover lithologies. These ridges have shed eroded material from their crests to the base of the mountain fronts in the form of talus slopes, debris flows, and alluvial-colluvial fans for perhaps 10 m.y. South of Roanoke, however, ridges transition into a broad hilly plateau, flanked on the east by the Blue Ridge escarpment and the eastern Continental Divide. Here, deposits of rounded pebbles, cobbles, and boulders preserve remnants of ancestral west-flowing drainage systems. Both bedrock and surficial geologic processes provide an array of economic deposits along the length of the Blue Ridge Parkway corridor in Virginia, including base and precious metals and industrial minerals. However, common stone was the most important commodity for creating the Blue Ridge Parkway, which yielded building stone for overlooks and tunnels, or crushed stone for road base and pavement.
Laurentian and Amazonian sediment sources to Neoproterozoic–lower Paleozoic Maryland Piedmont rocks
Abstract Recent field and associated studies in eight 7.5-minute quadrangles near Mount Rogers in Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee provide important stratigraphic and structural relationships for the Neoproterozoic Mount Rogers and Konnarock formations, the northeast end of the Mountain City window, the Blue Ridge–Piedmont thrust sheet, and regional faults. Rocks in the northeast end of the Mountain City window constitute an antiformal syncline. Overturned Konnarock and Unicoi formations in the window require a ramp-flat geometry in the hanging wall of the Blue Ridge thrust sheet or stratigraphic pinch-out of the Konnarock Formation. Undulose and ribbon quartz, fractured feldspars, and mylonitic foliations from the Stone Mountain and Catface faults indicate top-to-NW motion, and ductile deformation above ∼300 °C along the base of the Blue Ridge thrust sheet on the southeast side of the window. The Stone Mountain fault was not recognized northeast of Troutdale, Virginia. The Shady Valley thrust sheet is continuous with the Blue Ridge thrust sheet. The ∼750 Ma Mount Rogers Formation occurs in three volcanic centers in the Blue Ridge thrust sheet. Basal clastic rocks of the lower Mount Rogers Formation nonconformably overlie Mesoproterozoic basement in the northeasternmost Razor Ridge volcanic center, but the basal contact in parts of the Mount Rogers and Pond Mountain volcanic centers is strongly tectonized and consistent with a NW-directed, greenschist-facies high-strain zone. The contact between the Mount Rogers Formation and Konnarock Formation is nonconformable, locally faulted. Metarhyolite interbedded with lacustrine and fluvial rocks suggests that volcanism and glaciation were locally coeval, establishing an age of ∼750 Ma for the Konnarock Formation, a pre-Sturtian glaciation. Multiple greenschist-facies, high-strain zones crosscut the Blue Ridge thrust sheet including the Fries high-strain zone (2–11 km wide). Foliations across the Fries and Gossan Lead faults have similar orientations and top-to-NW contractional deformation.
Volcanic rift margin model for the rift-to-drift setting of the late Neoproterozoic-early Cambrian eastern margin of Laurentia: Chilhowee Group of the Appalachian Blue Ridge
Implications for late Grenvillian (Rigolet phase) construction of Rodinia using new U-Pb data from the Mars Hill terrane, Tennessee and North Carolina, United States
Abstract Mesoproterozoic basement in the vicinity of Mount Rogers is characterized by considerable lithologic variability, including major map units composed of gneiss, amphibolite, migmatite, meta-quartz monzodiorite and various types of granitoid. SHRIMP U-Pb geochronology and field mapping indicate that basement units define four types of occurrences, including (1) xenoliths of ca. 1.33 to ≥1.18 Ga age, (2) an early magmatic suite including meta-granitoids of ca. 1185–1140 Ma age that enclose or locally intrude the xenoliths, (3) metasedimentary rocks represented by layered granofels and biotite schist whose protoliths were likely deposited on the older meta-granitoids, and (4) a late magmatic suite composed of younger, ca. 1075–1030 Ma intrusive rocks of variable chemical composition that intruded the older rocks. The magmatic protolith of granofels constituting part of a layered, map-scale xenolith crystallized at ca. 1327 Ma, indicating that the lithology represents the oldest, intact crust presently recognized in the southern Appalachians. SHRIMP U-Pb data indicate that periods of regional Mesoproterozoic metamorphism occurred at 1170–1140 and 1070–1020 Ma. The near synchroneity in timing of regional metamorphism and magmatism suggests that magmas were emplaced into crust that was likely at nearsolidus temperatures and that melts might have contributed to the regional heat budget. Much of the area is cut by numerous, generally east- to northeast-striking Paleozoic fault zones characterized by variable degrees of ductile deformation and recrystallization. These high-strain fault zones dismember the terrane, resulting in juxtaposition of units and transformation of basement lithologies to quartz- and mica-rich tectonites with protomylonitic and mylonitic textures. Mineral assemblages developed within such zones indicate that deformation and recrystallization likely occurred at greenschist-facies conditions at ca. 340 Ma.
A model for Iapetan rifting of Laurentia based on Neoproterozoic dikes and related rocks
Geologic evidence of the Neoproterozoic rifting of Laurentia during breakup of Rodinia is recorded in basement massifs of the cratonic margin by dike swarms, volcanic and plutonic rocks, and rift-related clastic sedimentary sequences. The spatial and temporal distribution of these geologic features varies both within and between the massifs but preserves evidence concerning the timing and nature of rifting. The most salient features include: (1) a rift-related magmatic event recorded in the French Broad massif and the southern and central Shenandoah massif that is distinctly older than that recorded in the northern Shenandoah massif and northward; (2) felsic volcanic centers at the north ends of both French Broad and Shenandoah massifs accompanied by dike swarms; (3) differences in volume between massifs of cover-sequence volcanic rocks and rift-related clastic rocks; and (4) WNW orientation of the Grenville dike swarm in contrast to the predominately NE orientation of other Neoproterozoic dikes. Previously proposed rifting mechanisms to explain these features include rift-transform and plume–triple-junction systems. The rift-transform system best explains features 1, 2, and 3, listed here, and we propose that it represents the dominant rifting mechanism for most of the Laurentian margin. To explain feature 4, as well as magmatic ages and geochemical trends in the Northern Appalachians, we propose that a plume–triple-junction system evolved into the rift-transform system. A ca. 600 Ma mantle plume centered east of the Sutton Mountains generated the radial dike swarm of the Adirondack massif and the Grenville dike swarm, and a collocated triple junction generated the northern part of the rift-transform system. An eastern branch of this system produced the Long Range dike swarm in Newfoundland, and a subsequent western branch produced the ca. 554 Ma Tibbit Hill volcanics and the ca. 550 Ma rift-related magmatism of Newfoundland.
Geologic mapping of Mesoproterozoic lithologies and foliations, and sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP) U-Pb crystallization ages of 43 samples of orthogneisses and metagranitoids from the northern Blue Ridge establish new subdivisions: group 1 (1183–1144 Ma), group 2 (1143–1111 Ma), and group 3 (1078–1028 Ma). Protoliths of group 1 were metamorphosed at amphibolite- to granulite-facies conditions and strongly deformed between ca. 1153 and ca. 1144 Ma. Metagranitoids of groups 2 and 3 were emplaced continually for another 115 m.y. and display only local effects of diminishing deformation events. Ages of zircon overgrowths overlap temporally with igneous crystallization ages of group 3, but continued until ca. 960 Ma.
New geologic mapping, petrology, and U-Pb geochronology indicate that Mesoproterozoic crust near Mount Rogers consists of felsic to mafic meta-igneous rocks emplaced over 260 m.y. The oldest rocks are compositionally diverse and migmatitic, whereas younger granitoids are porphyritic to porphyroclastic. Cathodoluminescence imaging indicates that zircon from four representative units preserves textural evidence of multiple episodes of growth, including domains of igneous, metamorphic, and inherited origin. Sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP) trace-element analyses indicate that metamorphic zircon is characterized by lower Th/U, higher Yb/Gd, and lower overall rare earth element (REE) concentrations than igneous zircon. SHRIMP U-Pb isotopic analyses of zircon define three episodes of magmatism: 1327 ± 7 Ma, 1180–1155 Ma, and 1061 ± 5 Ma. Crustal recycling is recorded by inherited igneous cores of 1.33–1.29 Ga age in 1161 ± 7 Ma meta-monzogranite. Overlapping ages of igneous and metamorphic crystallization indicate that plutons of ca. 1170 and 1060 Ma age were emplaced during episodes of regional heating. Local development of hornblende + plagioclase + quartz ± clinopyroxene indicates that prograde metamorphism at 1170–1145 Ma and 1060–1020 Ma reached upper-amphibolite-facies conditions, with temperatures estimated using Ti-in-zircon geothermometry at ~740 ± 40 °C during both episodes. The chemical composition of 1327 ± 7 Ma orthogranofels from migmatite preserves the first evidence of arc-generated rocks in the Blue Ridge, indicating a subduction-related environment that may have been comparable to similar-age systems in inliers of the Northern Appalachians and the Composite Arc belt of Canada. Granitic magmatism at 1180–1155 Ma and ca. 1060 Ma near Mount Rogers was contemporaneous with anorthosite-mangerite-charnockite-granite (AMCG) plutonism in the Northern Appalachian inliers and Canadian Grenville Province. Metamorphism at ca. 1160 and 1060 Ma correlates temporally with the Shawinigan orogeny and Ottawan phase of the Grenvillian orogeny, respectively, suggesting that the Blue Ridge was part of Rodinia dating back to ca. 1180 Ma.
Abstract The Blue Ridge province in north-central Virginia forms a large basement massif at the hinterland edge of the central Appalachian fold-and-thrust belt. Rocks and structures exposed in the Blue Ridge record a long tectonic history that encompasses the Mesoproterozoic Grenvillian orogen, Neoproterozoic Iapetan crustal extension, multiple Paleozoic collisional events, and Mesozoic tectonism. The purpose of this field trip is to provide an overview of Blue Ridge tectonics, highlight the findings of recent studies, and discuss the outstanding questions that remain unanswered in Blue Ridge geology. The trip will traverse the Blue Ridge from southeast to northwest and includes stops along the Skyline Drive in Shenandoah National Park and the Shenandoah Valley.
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.
Contrasting tectonothermal domains and faulting in the Potomac terrane, Virginia–Maryland—discrimination by 40 Ar/ 39 Ar and fission-track thermochronology
Detailed mapping in the Mesoproterozoic northern Blue Ridge massif has delineated ten high-grade metamorphic map units of mostly granitic composition occurring in association with charnockite and paragneiss. U-Pb isotopic dating of zircons from these rocks defines three episodes of protolith intrusion during the interval from 1150 to 1055 Ma. Crosscutting relationships, structural analysis of foliations and lineations, and comparison of deformational fabrics of gneisses with different protolith ages indicate three episodes of Grenvillian deformation under differing stress regimes: D1, post–1140 Ma and pre–1120 Ma, involving regional coaxial compression; D2, post–1055 Ma and pre–1035 (?) Ma, noncoaxial ductile shear; and D3, post–1035 (?) Ma and pre–1030 (?) Ma, late-stage compression. The Short Hill fault, a Paleozoic structure of possibly Grenvilleage origin, separates predominantly older gneisses with D1 foliation to the west from predominantly younger gneisses with D2 and D3 structures to the east. Geologic features in the central Blue Ridge massif that are similar to those in the northern Blue Ridge include a central fault zone, the Rockfish Valley fault zone, separating a more charnockitic suite of rocks to the west from a more leucogranitic suite to the east. We propose a model in which the Short Hill fault and the Rockfish Valley fault zone were formerly part of a single discontinuity that was offset by a younger Neoproterozoic normal fault during early rifting of the Laurentian margin. This rift-related normal fault became the locus of intrusion of the 735–702 Ma Robertson River batholith.
Large bedrock landslides of the Appalachian Valley and Ridge province of eastern North America
Large bedrock landslides have been identified on dip slopes of the Appalachian Valley and Ridge province of eastern North America. These landslides include rock block slides, rock slumps, rock slides, rock avalanches, and gravitational sags (sackung) and are the largest known in this area. Single landslides may involve more than one billion cubic meters of rock. The large bedrock landslides are weathered and most likely Quaternary in age. The present distribution of the large failures may be due to changes in the rock types present on dip slopes as well as proximity to major drainages and seismic zones. Little evidence is available to suggest movements of this magnitude during historic times. However, because such large slope failures constitute a significant hazard to life and man-made structures, it is important to know where, why, and how they have occurred.