Tectonic studies of the Rae craton and flanking orogenic systems

Régions: South Slave Region

étiquettes: geology, geochemistry, chemistry

chercheur principal: Thiessen, Eric (4)
Nᵒ de permis: 17449
Organisation: Memorial University of Newfoundland
Année(s) de permis: 2024 2023 2022
Délivré: janv. 15, 2024
Équipe de projet: Eric Thiessen, Kiera Hamel, Ghazeleh Mohammadi

Objectif(s): 1) To determine the largest possible contribution of mantle-derived heat sources; 2) To establish a modern structural and tectono-metamorphic framework; and, 3) To evaluate evidence for mantle-derived heat input.

Description du projet: This licence has been issued for the scientific research application No. 5816. This research will be guided by three objectives: 1) determine the largest possible contribution of mantle-derived heat sources, 2) establish a modern structural and tectono-metamorphic framework, and 3) evaluate evidence for mantle-derived heat input. Studies will involve field observations and targeted small-volume rock sampling followed by collection of micro-analytical chemical, isotopic, age and structural data. Methods will include whole rock geochemistry, petrologic modelling and detailed pressure-temperature-time-deformation path construction, in situ age and trace-element analyses (U-Pb zircon, monazite, titanite, rutile; Lu-Hf garnet; Ar-Ar & Rb-Sr mica), and kinematic and rheologic analyses of shear zones. Mantle isotopic signatures and associated heat contributions will also be directly tested through age and trace-element data (zircon, garnet, rutile) and by using isotopic data (zircon Hf) from currently unstudied mafic xenoliths within Taltson plutons. Prior to each field season (4-6 weeks of work in the summer), the research will reach out to NWT stakeholders and organizations to inform of the exact locations and intentions of this research project. Every November, the research group will travel to the Yellowknife Geoscience Forum, where they will communicate our results and activities in plain language to the public. The fieldwork for this study will be conducted from: July 01 - July 31, 2024