Flood basalts of the Wrangellia Terrane, southwest Yukon: Implications for the formation of oceanic plateaus, continental crust and Ni-Cu-PGE mineralization
The Wrangellia Terrane along the northwest margin of North America is an extensive accreted oceanic plateau. These volcanic sequences erupted onto an extinct island arc in less than 5 million years at ca. 230 Ma. Triassic Wrangellia basalts and intrusions form a 1 to 10 km-wide linear belt of mafic and ultramafic rocks extending 300 km across southwest Yukon. A total of 85 samples were collected for geochemical and isotopic analysis from 10 widespread areas along the entire length of the linear belt. Field observations during the summer of 2004, and a synthesis of previous research for the Yukon portion of Wrangellia, are part of a larger research project involving Wrangellia basalts extending from Vancouver Island to central Alaska. The Wrangellia volcanic sequences represent one of the finest examples of an accreted oceanic plateau worldwide. They provide an excellent opportunity to gain a better understanding of the mantle source of oceanic plateaus and to assess the role of accretion of oceanic plateaus in continental growth.
Le gouvernement du Yukon reconnaît l’existence des territoires traditionnels des peuples autochtones partout au Yukon et souligne leur intendance de la terre et de l’eau ainsi que leur lien ancestral avec le territoire.