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Explore the causes of reflectivity in Archean cratons, from gneiss to mantle reflections. Learn about "shingle" reflections, mantle structures, and vertical tectonics. Analogy with modern and Paleozoic examples offers insights into tectonic activity.
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Deep seismic reflection profiling of Archean cratons • Outline: • Locations of available profiles • Causes of reflectivity: rules of thumb • “Shingle” reflections: indicators of horizontal tectonics • Mantle reflections: Archean subduction? • Vertical tectonics: an example • Conclusion Arie J. van der Velden Frederick A. Cook
Causes of reflectivity:rules of thumb • gneiss • fault zones • sills • Moho Generally reflective Generally poorly reflective • metavolcanic rocks • metasedimentary rocks • granite • mantle
Seismic reflection data sees mainly structure • Profiles from the Superior, Yilgarn and Slave provide a snapshot of the nature of tectonic activity at ~2.75-2.6 Ga
“shingle” reflections • characterized by dipping, listric reflections in the middle and lower crust • resemble imbricate slices within antiformal stacks, as seen in brittle-deformed foreland belts • however, shingle reflections occur within the ductile lower crust, and strain distribution within them is not well known
“shingle” reflections - Wabigoon S N 30 km
“shingle” reflections - Wabigoon S N 30 km
“shingle” reflections - Abitibi S N 30 km
“shingle” reflections - Abitibi S N 30 km
“shingle” reflections – eastern Yilgarn W E 10 km
“shingle” reflections – eastern Yilgarn W E 10 km
Analogy – thrust-and-fold structures E W ~3 m
Analogy – thrust-and-fold structures E W ~3 m
“shingle” reflections • generally considered to be indicators of horizontal foreshortening • often occur beneath greenstone belts • likely responsible for thickening crust beneath greenstone belts to present proportions • Hard to tell from reflection data whether the “imbricates” are parautochthonous slices, or if they are allochthonous rocks emplaced by subcretion.
Mantle reflections • gently to moderately dipping reflections extending from the Moho into the mantle • typically occur beneath greenstone belt to plutonic-gneiss domain transitions • typically dip beneath the protocraton (gneiss domain)
mantle reflections – Superior, Red Lake S N 30 km
mantle reflections – Slave, Yellowknife W E 30 km
Mantle reflections • Mantle reflections likely accommodate compressional deformation • Difficult to tell from reflection data whether mantle reflections accommodate 10s of km, 100s km, or 1000s of km of displacement • Appear to be significant structures associated with accretion of “terranes” • By analogy with modern examples, mantle reflections are often interpreted as indicators of subduction
Concluding thoughts • Seismic reflection data image structures within the crust associated with horizontal compression • Dome-and-keel structures are in some cases underlain by younger low-angle structures, while in other cases they may project to the base of the crust • Reflection patterns beneath Neoarchean cratons are remarkably similar to profiles across the hinterlands of younger orogens • There is no systematic change in reflection patterns with age
Acknowledgements • We would like to thank Tim Barton, Bruce Goleby, Barry Drummond and the ANSIR staff at Geoscience Australia for making available the Yilgarn data set • NSERC • GSA • GSA – graduate students association, U of C