Paleoproterozoic Bonnet Plume River intrusions: Evidence for a calc-alkaline arc at 1.7 Ga and its partial preservation in Yukon, Canada.

The 1.71 Ga Bonnet Plume River intrusions (BPRI) and related volcanics are preserved only as clasts in the 1.60 Ga Wernecke breccias of Yukon that host iron-oxide copper gold (IOCG) occurrences. Field work conducted in 2009 confirmed that they did not intrude the surrounding <1.64 Ga Wernecke Supergroup. Petrography shows that they are extensively altered and/or metasomatized, although relicts of primary igneous minerals remain. The major oxides are of little use in classification. Trace element geochemistry however, reveals a mafic to intermediate, calc-alkaline volcanic arc signature. Geochemical modelling has demonstrated that crystal fractionation was dominated by pyroxenes, plagioclase and olivine. The BPRI and related volcanic rocks are thought to have originated in a calc-alkaline volcanic arc that was obducted onto the Wernecke Supergroup, subsequently partially brecciated, and finally sank within the Wernecke breccias to the level of the Wernecke Supergroup.

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Publisher Yukon Geological Survey


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License Open Government Licence - Yukon
Date published 2011-04-04
Date updated 2011-04-04


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