Abstract
The
Great Falls
tectonic zone and the Vulcan structure both have been proposed as the
site of a
Paleoproterozoic suture between the Archean Hearne and Wyoming
provinces. Both hypotheses remain viable
because all
Precambrian rocks composing the Vulcan structure and much of the Great
Falls
tectonic zone are buried beneath Phanerozoic cover.
The primary exceptions to this are the mafic to felsic igneous
and metamorphic rocks of the Little Belt Mountains (Montana),
previously
considered the northernmost exposures of the Wyoming province. New U-Pb zircon ages from the late kinematic
Pinto diorite (207Pb/206Pb age: 1864 +/- 5 Ma)
and a
gneissic unit intruded by the Pinto (207Pb/206Pb
age:
1867 +/- 6 Ma), however, confirm their Paleoproterozoic age. These rocks exhibit an overall calc-alkaline
affinity and the depletion in high field strength elements typical of
convergent margin environments.
Whole-rock Sm-Nd data (initial epsilon of –1 to +4) and a lack
of
premagmatic zircons indicate that the magmas were principally derived
from a
depleted mantle source, not from older crust. These data suggest that at
least some rocks within the Great Falls tectonic zone originated at a
convergent margin that developed during the closure of an ocean basin
along the
northwestern margin of the Wyoming craton at ~1.9 Ga.
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