Age
and tectonic implications of Paleoproterozoic metamorphism in the
northern
Wyoming Province
Mueller, P., Burger, H.,
Wooden, J., Brady, J., Cheney, J., Harms, T., Heatherington, A., and
Mogk, D.,
2005, Journal of Geology, v. 111, p. 169-179.
Abstract
U-Pb ages measured by ion
microprobe (SHRIMP RG) on zircons from the Tobacco Root Mountains and
monazite
from the Highland Mountains indicate that the northern Wyoming province
experienced an episode of high-grade metamorphism ~1.77 Ga ago . Leucosome in Archean gneisses from the
Tobacco Root Mountains contains a distinctive population of zircons
with an age
of 1.77 Ga, but also contains zircons to ~3.5 Ga. It
is interpreted to have been derived by anatexis of nearby
Archean schists. A granulite facies mafic dike that cuts across Archean
gneissic
banding in the Tobacco Root Mountains contains two distinct populations
of
zircons. A group of small (<50 mm),
non-prismatic grains is interpreted to be metamorphic and yields an age
of 1.76
Ga; a group of slightly larger, prismatic grains yields an age of 2.06
Ga,
which is interpreted to be the time of crystallization of the dike. Monazite from a leucogranite from the
Highland Mountains yields a well-defined age of 1.77 Ga, which is
interpreted
as the time of partial melting and emplacement of the leucogranite. These results suggest that the northwestern
Wyoming province, which largely lies within the western part of the
Great Falls
tectonic zone, experienced a metamorphic maximum at 1.77 Ga. This age is ~100 m.y. younger than the
proposed time of Wyoming-Hearne collision in the central Great Falls
tectonic
zone (1.86 Ga) and suggests the northwestern Wyoming province may have
been
involved in a separate, younger collisional event at ~1.77 Ga. An event at this time is essentially coeval
with collisions proposed for the eastern and southeastern margins of
the
province, and suggests a multi-episodic model for the incorporation of
the
Wyoming craton into Laurentia.
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Last update: August 16, 2005