Affiliation:
1. § 1300 Islington Avenue, Suite 206, Toronto, Ontario M9A 5C4
2. Geological Survey of Canada, 601 Booth Street, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0E8, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The Lower Proterozoic, Lake Superior-type Sokoman Iron Formation of the Labrador Trough is one of the world's largest iron formations. It represents a unique, major event in the history of the Trough. Originally a largely irregularly bedded, intraclastic, granular, locally oolitic, conglomeratic iron formation, it is highly variable in its stratigraphy, mineralogy, and textures, which are the consequence of sedimentology, diagenesis, metamorphism, structural deformation, and magmatic overprint. Despite its complexity, the regional characteristics of the iron formation within the 1200 km length of the Labrador Trough indicate three main stratigraphic units, defined by their dominant iron minerals: the lower and upper parts of the formation are characterized by the abundance of iron silicates and carbonates (silicate-carbonate facies), and the middle part is characterized by the dominance of iron oxides (oxide facies). The origin of these lithostratigraphic units of the iron formation is attributed to three main sea-level changes which changed the chemistry (oxidation–reduction potential) and the physical energy (wave and current action) of the sedimentary environment.
The vast amount of iron and some of the silica required for deposition of the Sokoman Formation is inferred to be the consequence of intense hydrothermal activity within a major rift created by the eastward extension of the Labrador Trough ca 1.88 Ga. The hydrothermal fluids venting within the rift saturated the deep and likely anoxic sea of the Trough with ferrous iron and some silica which then upwelled onto its oxygenated shallow waters to deposit the iron formation.
The end of the processes involved in creating the iron formation ca. 1.82 Ga is attributed to the westward contraction of the Trough induced by the Hudsonian (Trans-Hudson) orogeny, which closed the iron- and silica-generating rift and at the same time ended all magmatic activities and related sedimentation coeval with the deposition of the iron formation.
Publisher
Mineralogical Association of Canada
Subject
Geochemistry and Petrology
Reference72 articles.
1. Alderon Iron Ore Corporation
(2017)
Annual Report: Kami (Kamistiatusset) Area: Summary of geology and stratigraphy.
Alderon Iron Ore Corporation,
Vancouver, Canada.
2. Baragar,
W.R.A.
(1967)
Wakuach Lake Map-Area Quebec-Labrador (23O). Geological Survey of Canada, Memoir 344.
Geological Survey of Canada,
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
3. Bilodeau,
C.
&
Caron-Côté,E.
(2018)
Géologie de la région de la rivière Arnaud, provinces du Superior (Minto) et de Churchill (Fosse du Labrador), secteur de Kangirsuk, Nunavik, Québec, Canada. Ministère de l'Énergie et des Ressources naturelles, Québec, Bulletin GéologiqueBG2018-04.
4. Birkett,
T.C.
(1991)
Origin of the Lower Proterozoic Fleming Chert Breccia, Newfoundland Labrador, Quebec. Geological Survey of Canada, Paper91-12,
44
p.
5. Bronwen,
W.
(2012)
Exploration of Wabush Lake area, Iron Ore Company of Canada
.
Labrador Iron Ore Royalty Corporation (LIORC) Newfoundland and Labrador department of Mines and Energy Report,16p.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献