|
|
MARKETS
New Evidence for Syntectonic Fluid Migration Across the Hinterland-Foreland Transition of the Canadian Cordillera
Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 107, No. B4,
10.1029/2001JB000217, 2002
Stuart R. Knoop, Lori A. Kennedy, and Gregory M. Dipple
Oxygen isotope dat from syntectonic veins, thrust faults, and wall rocks suggest
that fluids infiltrated the Western Ranges of the Rocky Mountain foreland from
deeper rocs of the Dogtooth Range during Mesozoic contraction. This signifies
the first such evidence for kilometer-scale fluid migrtion t the
hinterland-foreland transition of the Canadian Cordillera. Fluid infiltration
resulted in isotopic depletion in wall rocks and isotopic disequillibrium
between veins (fluid) and their host rocks downstream of a lithologic,
structural, and isotopic shift between predominantly siliciclastic (Dogtooth
Range) and calcareous (Western Ranges) sequences. The shift corresponds with an
average that is 3% higher in the Western Ranges. In the Dogtooth Range,
atypically low carbonate values, and the consistency with which vein signatures
approach the average bulk rock of individual outcrops indicate fluid buffering
by a siliciclastic reservoir and outcrop-scale fluid circulation. In contrast,
rocks and veins in the Western Ranges exhibit a gradational increase in that
extends > 14km eastward and up section from the isotopic shift and possess
values that are below or at the low end of typical carbonate compositions.
Furthermore, veins systematiclaly exhibit lower oxygen values than their host
rocks; this implies that the fluids that entered the Western Ranges were in
modest disequilibrium with the rocks through which they flowed. We use a
one-dimensional reactive transport model to infer that rocks in the Western
Ranges experienced a time-integrated fluid flux and sluggish reaction kinetics
during the flow event.
Click here to
request a copy of this article in its entirety
|